title
Worldview · 2026-05-12T14:06:11.000Z · worldview.genval.ai
Worldview Snapshot v1.0.9

Macro worldview

Tuesday-morning reset (~36 minutes into the cash session after the 8:30 AM ET April CPI release and the Monday-evening Warsh cloture vote). The hot CPI print fired the stagflation thesis tell in the bad direction: headline 3.8% YoY (vs 3.7% consensus, highest since May 2023) on +0.6% m/m, with energy +3.8% accounting for more than 40% of the headline gain; core 2.8% YoY (vs 2.7% consensus) on +0.4% m/m. The energy-passthrough mechanism the 1.0.8 narrative had explicitly named is now data-confirmed rather than priced ahead - and lands directly into a deteriorating Iran-deal environment where WTI June futures rose +3.3% intraday to $101.37 (first trade above $100 since the post-ceasefire drawdown) and Brent July +3.2% to $107.58. Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser framed the supply impact as "roughly 100 million barrels of supply each week" with market normalization potentially deferred into next year if disruptions persist - the most concrete supply-side quantification of the Hormuz overlay so far. Diplomatic-track collapse continues. Trump on Tuesday morning called Iran's counterproposal "garbage" and described the ceasefire as having "a 1% chance of living" - an escalation from Monday's "massive life support" framing. Reports indicate Trump is meeting with the national security team to weigh a potential return to military operations. Iran's military warned of a "heavy assault" against US assets in the Middle East if Iranian vessels face more attacks. The threat-and-engage simultaneity has tilted further toward engage without a fresh kinetic event yet hitting the wire. Stagflation-risk steps to 0.75 (from 0.70). The binary CPI tell that anchored the 1.0.8 confidence rationale ("the right place for the next confidence move") fired in the bad direction on both headline and core, with energy explicitly cited by BLS as accounting for more than 40% of the headline gain. Multiple commentators (Kiplinger, market commentary) now suggest the Fed cannot lower rates near-term and a hike-pricing-in scenario for 2027 is being floated. Tuesday's print under Powell's chair (he exits Friday) sets the inherited inflation backdrop Warsh will face. Persistent-energy-shock steps to 0.62 (from 0.58). WTI broke $100 on the Iran-deal collapse + Hormuz-sovereignty demand + Trump-considering- military combination, confirming the structural transmission past the Monday +3% move rather than fading. Aramco CEO's "~100M bbl/week supply loss" framing is the first major industry-CEO quantification of the shipping-flow impairment. SequencedCondition durable-reopening leg remains structurally far from firing favorably. Equity-melt-up-vs-recession-risk steps to 0.70 (from 0.72). SPX -0.37%, NDX -0.65%, DJI -0.21% in the first session-hour off Monday's fresh ATHs - a meaningful direct response to the hot CPI plus oil spike combination. Russell 2000 +0.33% diverged, but the cap-weighted pullback in tech is the more thesis-relevant signal. Invalidation legs still don't fire (VIX at 18-19 range well below the 25 vol-expansion threshold, and SPX>7,300 with VIX<15 also blocked with vol elevated). The melt-up case absorbed real damage today but is not broken. Iran-war-rearmament holds at 0.82. Trump weighing military options is incremental, not a fresh kinetic event - the AndCondition invalidation cap remains the binding constraint and that's unchanged. LMT $194B / RTX $271B backlogs plus Golden Dome commitments survive any deal-track outcome. Gold-debasement-bid holds at 0.87. Structural backdrop strengthened today (hot CPI, oil above $100, Iran-deal collapse, Trump-considering- military), but no Tuesday gold spot print has been verified yet at snapshot time. Holding rather than stepping up; gold typically does not move one-for-one with daily geopolitical news. AI-capex-cycle-with-china-tail holds at 0.85. NDX -0.65% intraday on hot CPI is broad-market noise, not a thesis-specific event. May 20 NVDA Q1 FY2027 print remains the binary tell. Powell-Warsh transition risk holds at 0.50. Cloture vote passed Monday 49-44 with Fetterman and Coons crossing party lines - one more bipartisan vote than the May 9 baseline expectation. The Tuesday Senate path is governor-confirmation roll call (procedurally near-certain); Wednesday/Thursday brings chair confirmation; full confirmation by Friday May 15 when Powell's chair term expires. The "what does Warsh do once confirmed" risk premium is the active question and CPI Tuesday under Powell's chair frames the inheritance. Calendar this week: Tuesday May 12 Warsh governor confirmation vote; Wed-Thu May 14-15 Lebanon-Israel third round in Washington (Karam, Dermer); Powell exits as chair Friday May 15; NVDA Q1 FY2027 May 20 5 PM ET. June 16-17 FOMC is Warsh's first chair meeting under a print that has already invalidated the soft-landing path.

  1. Iran war rearmament cycle
  2. Persistent energy premium
  3. Stagflation risk and Fed independence stress
  4. Gold structural debasement bid
  5. AI capex sustained but with China decoupling tail risk
  6. Equity melt-up versus building recession risk
  7. Fed leadership transition policy uncertainty

Evidence at a glance

One mark per supporting evidence item across all theses, colored by strength.

Theses

Each thesis below carries a machine-evaluable invalidationCondition — a typed condition tree (AND / OR / Threshold / Event / Sequenced) that defines exactly when the claim should be considered broken — plus typed, citation-backed Evidence. Click a thesis's Supporting evidence to see the audit trail behind the confidence.

Iran war rearmament cycle

active 25evidence
Conf 0.82
Held at 0.82. Trump's Tuesday escalation ("garbage" / "1% chance" / reportedly weighing military options) and Iran's threat of "heavy assault against US assets" tilt threat-and-engage further toward engage but do not constitute a fresh kinetic event on the wire at snapshot time. The AndCondition invalidation requires BOTH durable peace AND a sustained 2-quarter DoD outlay decline, neither of which is near firing; further upside needs concrete fresh-conflict events with verifiable munitions-consumption data. FY2026 $1T defense budget plus Golden Dome commitments survive any near-term resolution path - the procurement-cycle case is structurally robust independent of which way the diplomatic track resolves this week.
The US-Iran war that began Feb 28 2026 (Operation Epic Fury) triggered a multi-year defense spending cycle that benefits prime contractors with missile and missile-defense exposure regardless of diplomatic-track outcomes. With Trump rejecting Iran's May 10 MOU response ("TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE"), escalating Monday May 11 to "massive life support," and on Tuesday May 12 calling Iran's counterproposal "garbage" with the ceasefire having "a 1% chance of living" while reportedly meeting with the national security team to weigh military options, the procurement / replenishment cycle persists and arguably accelerates. Depleted munitions stockpiles (438 Iranian ballistic missiles, 2,012 drones, 19 cruise missiles fired at UAE through April 1) and Golden Dome ($185B) are committed multi-year programs that survive any near-term deal scenario.
Invalidation condition
AndCondition 2 operands
  • Event US-Iran Peace Agreement ImplementedA formal, durable US-Iran peace agreement takes effect. Distinct from a ceasefire (which can be transient) or a memorandum of understanding (which may not be implemented). Pair with `durability: durable`. (durable)
  • Threshold DoD Outlays YoY ChangeYear-over-year percent change in DoD outlays. Quarterly readings from Treasury Statement. lt 0 over 2 fiscal-quarters

Supporting evidence

Show evidence cards
  1. US-Israel coordinated airstrikes on Iran (Operation Epic Fury) commenced 2026-02-28, targeting military facilities, nuclear sites, and leadership. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei reported killed.

    • Date2026-02-28T00:00:00.000Z
  2. US fired 850+ Tomahawk missiles in the first phase of the US-Iran war (Operation Epic Fury) - the highest single-campaign Tomahawk usage in history.

    • Date2026-03-01T00:00:00.000Z
  3. FY2026 US defense budget reached $1 trillion, structurally elevated against Iran-war munitions consumption rates.

    • FY2027 US defense budget projected to grow further to support Golden Dome ($185B) and continued Iran-war replenishment.

      • Lockheed Martin (LMT) backlog grew to $194B as of Q1 2026.

        • SecurityLockheed Martin
        • MetricBacklogReported backlog (committed but undelivered orders) as of period end. Currency in evidenceStatement.
        • PeriodQ1 2026First calendar quarter of 2026 (January-March).
      • RTX (Raytheon Technologies) backlog grew to a record $271B as of Q1 2026. Double-digit organic sales growth; full-year EPS guidance raised to $6.70-$6.90, sales to $92.5-$93.5B.

        • SecurityRTX Corporation
        • MetricBacklogReported backlog (committed but undelivered orders) as of period end. Currency in evidenceStatement.
        • PeriodQ1 2026First calendar quarter of 2026 (January-March).
      • Trump executive order limits defense-contractor stock buybacks until production capacity catches up to procurement orders, forcing capex into manufacturing.

        • UAE Defense Ministry reported on 2026-05-08 that air defenses engaged two ballistic missiles and three drones launched by Iran; three people wounded. Per multiple US/regional reporting, this was the biggest escalation in violence since the US-Iran ceasefire was announced four weeks ago. Iran disputed responsibility through state media. Earlier in the same May 4-8 window: a missile hit a civilian car in Al Bahyan, Abu Dhabi killing a Palestinian national; Fujairah Oil Industry Zone hit by a drone causing a fire.

          • Date2026-05-08T00:00:00.000Z
        • US military reported intercepting Iranian attacks on three US Navy ships in the Strait of Hormuz on 2026-05-07 (Thursday night). No US ships hit. US subsequently "targeted Iranian military facilities responsible for attacking US forces." Top Iranian military command accused the US of violating the now-month-old ceasefire; the US said the truce remains in effect.

          • Date2026-05-07T00:00:00.000Z
        • US Central Command on 2026-05-08 disabled two empty Iranian oil tankers (M/T Sea Star III and M/T Sevda) attempting to reach an Iranian port in violation of the US naval blockade. F/A-18 Super Hornets fired precision munitions into the tankers' smokestacks per published video.

          • Date2026-05-08T00:00:00.000Z
        • US Navy reportedly sank seven small Iranian boats during the May 7 fire exchanges in the Strait of Hormuz. Combined with the tanker disabling and the UAE attack, the May 7-8 window represents the most kinetic 36-hour period since the April 12 ceasefire began.

          • Date2026-05-07T00:00:00.000Z
        • Trump on 2026-05-06 said Iran will be bombed "at a much higher level" if it does not agree to a peace deal. Set a one-week deadline. Threat-and-engage simultaneity is the negotiating posture.

          • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
          • Date2026-05-06T00:00:00.000Z
        • Iran formally delivered its response to the US 14-point MOU framework via Pakistani mediators on 2026-05-10. IRNA reporting indicates the response covered negotiations on the Strait of Hormuz, the nuclear program, and the lifting of sanctions. The 48-hour response window from May 9 has resolved.

          • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
        • Trump on 2026-05-10 Sunday evening responded to the Iran response: "I have just read the response from Iran's so-called 'Representatives.' I don't like it - TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" Posted via social media within hours of the formal delivery, the rejection materially walked back the diplomatic-track narrative that had anchored markets through May 6-9.

          • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
          • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
        • Trump on 2026-05-10 accused Iran of "playing games with the United States, and the rest of the World, for 47 years," adding: "They will be laughing no longer!" The 47-year framing references the 1979 Islamic Revolution and signals that Trump views the current rejection as continuous with decades of Iranian conduct rather than as an isolated negotiating posture.

          • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
          • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
        • Trump on 2026-05-10 reiterated threats to resume full-scale bombing if Iran does not "accept an agreement to reopen the strait and roll back its nuclear program." Restates the May 6 "much higher level" framing into the post-rejection context, signaling continued threat-and-engage simultaneity rather than an immediate escalation pivot.

          • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
          • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
        • UAE Ministry of Defence as of 2026-04-01 reported cumulative Iranian fire on UAE targets of 438 ballistic missiles, 2,012 drones, and 19 cruise missiles since the war began February 28. Combined with the May 4-8 escalation (Fujairah oil zone drone, Abu Dhabi civilian-car missile killing a Palestinian national, May 8 missile-and-drone barrage), the cumulative consumption rate is the denominator for the procurement-cycle thesis.

          • Date2026-04-01T00:00:00.000Z
        • Trump on 2026-05-11 (Monday) said the ceasefire between the US and Iran is "on massive life support" following Iran's latest counterproposal, which he had called "totally unacceptable" Sunday evening. The framing escalates Sunday's "TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" by attaching mortality language to the ceasefire itself - the diplomatic-track narrative is now formally described as failing rather than stalled.

          • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
          • Date2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
        • Trump on 2026-05-11 warned: "Just like we knocked them out again today, we'll knock them out a lot harder, and a lot more violently, in the future, if they don't get their Deal signed, FAST!" The "knocked them out again today" framing implies a fresh US-Iran kinetic exchange on Monday that the snapshot cannot fully characterize from open sources; combined with the Sunday rejection of Iran's MOU response it signals the threat-and-engage posture has tilted further toward engage.

          • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
          • Date2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
        • Iran on 2026-05-11 publicly vowed to "never bow" in response to Trump's rejection of its MOU response. Frames Iran's end-state position (war reparations, full Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz, end to sanctions, release of frozen assets) as non-negotiable rather than opening positions.

          • Date2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
        • Trump on 2026-05-12 morning called Iran's counterproposal "garbage" in remarks to reporters, escalating from Sunday's "TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" and Monday's "massive life support" framing. The successive language escalation across three consecutive days (rejection / mortality framing / dismissal as worthless) marks the diplomatic-track narrative as formally collapsed at the rhetorical level even before kinetic re-engagement.

          • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
          • Date2026-05-12T00:00:00.000Z
        • Trump on 2026-05-12 said of the ceasefire: "I would say the ceasefire is on massive life support, where the doctor walks in and says, 'Sir, your loved one has approximately a 1% chance of living.'" The "1% chance" framing extends Monday's "massive life support" with a specific survival-probability metaphor - the deal narrative is described as functionally dead while threat-and-engage simultaneity continues.

          • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
          • Date2026-05-12T00:00:00.000Z
        • Multiple reports on 2026-05-12 indicated President Trump was scheduled to meet with his national security team to weigh a potential return to military operations against Iran following the Iran response rejection and the deteriorating ceasefire framing. Confirms threat-and-engage simultaneity has tilted further toward engage without yet producing a fresh-fire event.

          • Date2026-05-12T00:00:00.000Z
        • Iran's military on 2026-05-12 warned of a "heavy assault" against US assets in the Middle East if Iranian vessels face more attacks during the ceasefire. The explicit conditional threat raises the kinetic-engagement probability if either side acts unilaterally on the Hormuz shipping front.

          • Date2026-05-12T00:00:00.000Z
        • Third round of Israel-Lebanon peace talks scheduled May 14-15 2026 in Washington. Lebanese delegation led by Simon Karam; Israeli delegation by Ron Dermer. State Department announcement: agenda covers border delineation, humanitarian relief, and "the full restoration of Lebanese sovereignty throughout its territory." First direct talks between the two governments in decades.

          • Date2026-05-14T00:00:00.000Z

        Persistent energy premium

        active 39evidence
        Conf 0.62
        Up to 0.62 from 0.58. Tuesday oil response confirms structural transmission past the Monday +3% move - WTI broke $100 (June +3.3% to $101.37, first triple-digit trade since the post-ceasefire drawdown) and Brent July +3.2% to $107.58, both extending Monday's +3% rather than mean-reverting. Aramco CEO Nasser's "~100M bbl/week" framing is the first major industry-CEO supply-side quantification - it shifts the energy thesis from "wartime premium that could unwind" to "structural supply impairment that needs months to rebuild even after a deal." Trump considering military options plus Iran threatening "heavy assault against US assets" adds tail-risk premium. Capped well below the 0.70-band because the OrCondition invalidation still has the SequencedCondition (durable Hormuz reopening followed by 30 days of WTI<$80) which would require multiple causal steps to fire favorably - markets will price the absence of those steps incrementally rather than all at once.
        Oil prices remain structurally elevated as long as the Strait of Hormuz reopening sequence is incomplete and Iranian retaliation risk is intact. WTI June futures rose +3.3% intraday Tuesday May 12 to $101.37, the first trade above $100 since the post-ceasefire drawdown, while Brent July +3.2% to $107.58 - the second consecutive day of 3%+ oil moves on Iran-deal collapse plus Hormuz-sovereignty demand plus Trump weighing military options. Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser framed the supply impact as "roughly 100 million barrels of supply each week" with market normalization potentially deferred into next year if disruptions persist - the most concrete supply-side quantification of the shipping-flow impairment so far. Iran on May 10 demanded "full Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz" as a precondition for any deal - procedurally incompatible with the durable-reopening leg of the SequencedCondition invalidation. May 10 Hormuz transit data: 17 vessels (13 inbound / 4 outbound; 10 AIS-visible, 7 dark / EO-detected only) against pre-war ~120 crossings/day.
        Invalidation condition
        OrCondition 2 operands
        • Sequenced after EventCondition then ThresholdCondition
        • Event OPEC Supply ShockMaterial OPEC+ supply increase or decrease that materially shifts the front-month oil price (typical threshold - 1+ million bpd of capacity change, but the runtime threshold is curator-judged).

        Supporting evidence

        Show evidence cards
        1. Iran formally closed the Strait of Hormuz on 2026-03-04, threatening any vessel attempting passage. IRGC issued passage prohibitions, boarded merchant ships, and laid sea mines. Brent surged past $120/bbl on the closure; QatarEnergy declared force majeure on all exports.

          • Date2026-03-04T00:00:00.000Z
        2. Trump announced a temporary pause in "Project Freedom" (US Navy escort operation through the Strait of Hormuz) on 2026-05-06, citing "great progress" toward a comprehensive agreement with Iran.

          • Effective2026-05-06T00:00:00.000Z
        3. White House reported nearing a one-page 14-point memorandum of understanding with Iran to end the war and establish a framework for more detailed nuclear talks.

          • Date2026-05-06T00:00:00.000Z
        4. Iran submitted its own 14-point counter-proposal on 2026-05-02 with maximalist demands - end of US naval blockade, release of frozen Iranian assets, lifting of sanctions, reparations, a new mechanism for Strait of Hormuz governance, and resolution within 30 days rather than the US-proposed 2-month ceasefire. Trump on May 3: "I will soon be reviewing the plan that Iran has just sent to us, but can't imagine that it would be acceptable in that they have not yet paid a big enough price."

          • Date2026-05-02T00:00:00.000Z
        5. Pakistan-mediated 2-week ceasefire active as of May 8 2026. Latest peace proposal involves Iran moratorium on nuclear enrichment, US lifting sanctions, both sides lifting Hormuz transit restrictions; 30-day negotiation period for detailed terms. Iran reviewing.

          • Date2026-05-08T00:00:00.000Z
        6. WTI crude settled at $95.42 on 2026-05-08, marginally higher on the day. Down from $104 on May 5 reflecting the May 6-8 ceasefire / MOU progression and a partial unwinding of the wartime premium. Two-contract weekly losses of more than 6% as the market priced the ceasefire holding.

          • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
          • Value95.42
        7. Brent crude futures closed at $101.29 on 2026-05-08, +1% on the day on the UAE attack and Iran-tanker fire-exchange news, but down more than 6% on the week as the underlying ceasefire / MOU framework held the wartime premium back. Goldman maintains a $77.50 target ~25% below spot.

          • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
          • Value101.29
        8. Goldman Sachs maintains a $77.50 Brent target - approximately 25% below the May 8 spot of $101.29, framing the wartime premium as transient.

          • Forecast77.5
          • Horizon12-Month12-month forecast horizon from the date of issuance.
        9. Iran reviewing a specific one-page peace memorandum that, if signed, would declare end-of-conflict and trigger a 30-day window for nuclear-moratorium / asset-unfreeze / Hormuz-security framework to land. More concrete than the May 6 "great progress" framing. Trump envoys Witkoff and Kushner negotiating directly and through mediators. Trump May 7: "very possible we'll make a deal."

          • Date2026-05-08T00:00:00.000Z
        10. Lebanon corridor described by regional press as having its "most intense week" since the April 16 ceasefire on 2026-05-08, with multiple cross-border incidents alongside the diplomatic timeline.

          • Date2026-05-08T00:00:00.000Z
        11. A Qatar LNG tanker began transiting the Strait of Hormuz on 2026-05-09, the first vessel movement attributed to ceasefire procedures since the conflict began in March. Iranian state media reported "safe and sustainable transit" facilitated by IRGC navy under new procedures. Subsequent versions reweight it as a one-off exception inside an actively-contested environment after the May 10 Iran-US deal rejection.

          • Date2026-05-09T00:00:00.000Z
        12. IRGC navy publicly committed on 2026-05-09 that "safe and sustainable transit will be facilitated" through the Strait of Hormuz under new procedures - phrased to reserve Iran's framing of the strait as conditionally open at IRGC discretion rather than open by international convention. Coexists with US naval blockade actions on May 7-8 and with Iran's broader May 10 demand for "full Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz."

          • RoleRegulatorGeneric role for an executive-branch regulator at the agency or director level.
          • Date2026-05-09T00:00:00.000Z
        13. Approximately 1,550+ vessels with 22,500 mariners reported still trapped inside the Persian Gulf as of 2026-05-09, unable to safely transit out under current conditions. Analysts (House of Commons Library briefing) describe full pre-war flow as "months if not years" away.

          • Date2026-05-09T00:00:00.000Z
        14. UAE Defense Ministry reported on 2026-05-08 that air defenses engaged two ballistic missiles and three drones launched by Iran; three people wounded. Per multiple US/regional reporting, this was the biggest escalation in violence since the US-Iran ceasefire was announced four weeks ago. Iran disputed responsibility through state media. Earlier in the same May 4-8 window: a missile hit a civilian car in Al Bahyan, Abu Dhabi killing a Palestinian national; Fujairah Oil Industry Zone hit by a drone causing a fire.

          • Date2026-05-08T00:00:00.000Z
        15. US military reported intercepting Iranian attacks on three US Navy ships in the Strait of Hormuz on 2026-05-07 (Thursday night). No US ships hit. US subsequently "targeted Iranian military facilities responsible for attacking US forces." Top Iranian military command accused the US of violating the now-month-old ceasefire; the US said the truce remains in effect.

          • Date2026-05-07T00:00:00.000Z
        16. US Central Command on 2026-05-08 disabled two empty Iranian oil tankers (M/T Sea Star III and M/T Sevda) attempting to reach an Iranian port in violation of the US naval blockade. F/A-18 Super Hornets fired precision munitions into the tankers' smokestacks per published video.

          • Date2026-05-08T00:00:00.000Z
        17. Just 191 vessels recorded crossing the Strait of Hormuz during the entire month of April 2026 - down from a typical pre-war monthly traffic of ~3,000 vessels. Quantifies how thin the "Hormuz transit" baseline is even when not actively contested.

          • Date2026-04-30T00:00:00.000Z
        18. Trump on 2026-05-06 said Iran will be bombed "at a much higher level" if it does not agree to a peace deal. Set a one-week deadline. Threat-and-engage simultaneity is the negotiating posture.

          • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
          • Date2026-05-06T00:00:00.000Z
        19. US national average gasoline price $4.54 per gallon as of 2026-05-08 per AAA - +44% from a year earlier on the Iran-war energy effects. About one-third of UMich May respondents spontaneously cited gas prices when asked about economic conditions.

          • Reading4.54
          • Period2026-05-08T00:00:00.000Z
        20. US officials on 2026-05-09 said Iranian responses to the 14-point MOU framework were expected within 48 hours, giving the Iran-deal track a concrete near-term resolution window. The window resolved May 10 with Iran formally responding via Pakistani mediators and Trump rejecting the response as "TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE."

          • Date2026-05-09T00:00:00.000Z
        21. Iran formally delivered its response to the US 14-point MOU framework via Pakistani mediators on 2026-05-10. IRNA reporting indicates the response covered negotiations on the Strait of Hormuz, the nuclear program, and the lifting of sanctions. The 48-hour response window from May 9 has resolved.

          • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
        22. Senior Iranian official on 2026-05-10 described Tehran's formal response to the US MOU as "realistic and positive," adding that "Washington's positive response to our response will move the negotiations forward quickly." The framing positions Iran as constructive while preserving maximalist substantive demands.

          • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
        23. Trump on 2026-05-10 Sunday evening responded to the Iran response: "I have just read the response from Iran's so-called 'Representatives.' I don't like it - TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" Posted via social media within hours of the formal delivery, the rejection materially walked back the diplomatic-track narrative that had anchored markets through May 6-9.

          • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
          • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
        24. Iranian state media on 2026-05-10 simultaneously rejected the US proposal as "amounting to surrender" and reaffirmed Tehran's demands of war reparations by the US, full Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz, an end to sanctions, and the release of seized Iranian assets. The framing parallels the May 2 14-point counter-proposal but is now positioned as Iran's formal end-state position.

          • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
        25. Iran's May 10 response demanded "full Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz" as part of the end-state. This is procedurally incompatible with the durable-reopening invalidation leg (which requires the strait to be open by international convention) and with the US naval blockade currently in force. The demand functions as a near-veto on any near-term durable reopening scenario.

          • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
        26. Lloyd's List recorded just 40 vessel transits through the Strait of Hormuz during the week ending 2026-05-03 - against a pre-war baseline of approximately 120 crossings per day. Quantifies how thin the post-ceasefire transit baseline is and how far it sits from "durable reopening" semantics.

          • Date2026-05-03T00:00:00.000Z
        27. Iran established a Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA) requiring every vessel seeking to transit the Strait of Hormuz to file an application form for IRGC permission - cementing IRGC discretionary control over the strait rather than relinquishing it. The procedural overlay parallels Iran's broader May 10 demand for "full Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz."

          • April 2026 CPI consensus headline forecast 3.7-3.8% YoY (vs March 3.3%) - Kiplinger, Wells Fargo (3.8%), Barclays (3.7%) and others explicitly attribute the lift to gasoline passthrough. Monthly headline forecast ~0.55-0.70% m/m. Multiple commentaries note the print would push the 12-month rate close to 4.0%.

            • SourceMarket ConsensusGeneric placeholder for "the prevailing market view" when the source is not a specific named aggregator. Use sparingly - typed aggregators are preferred when the source is identifiable.
            • Forecast3.75
          • WTI June futures settled $98.07 on Monday 2026-05-11, +3% (intraday near $99) on the Trump rejection of Iran's MOU response and the Iran-sovereignty demand. The direct price response confirms the structural energy-shock transmission rather than markets shrugging the rejection off. Reverses the prior week's 6% drawdown toward the deal-optimism baseline.

            • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
            • Value98.07
          • Brent July futures settled $104.21 on Monday 2026-05-11, +3% (intraday above $105). Mirrors the WTI move on the Iran-rejection / Hormuz-sovereignty demand and the implied Monday kinetic exchange. Goldman $77.50 target unchanged ~25% below settle.

            • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
            • Value104.21
          • 17 vessels transited the Strait of Hormuz on 2026-05-10 per the Strait of Hormuz Live Tracker - 13 inbound and 4 outbound. Of those, 10 were AIS-visible; 7 were "dark" (EO-only detection or AIS suppressed). The dark-vessel share quantifies the procedural opacity that Iran's PGSA application overlay was designed to produce - transit occurs but on Iran-discretionary terms rather than open by international convention. Still far below pre-war ~120 crossings/day.

            • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
          • Iranian official on 2026-05-11 said Iran's response to the US peace proposal contained "legitimate demands" - "reasonable and responsible" and "beneficial not only for Iran but also for the wider region and the world." The defensive framing positions Iran as constructive after Trump's rejection without walking back any substantive demand, including the Hormuz sovereignty demand.

            • Date2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
          • WTI June futures rose +3.3% intraday Tuesday 2026-05-12 to $101.37 - the first triple-digit trade since the post-ceasefire drawdown. Move extends Monday's +3% rather than mean-reverting; direct response to Trump rejection escalation ("garbage" / "1% chance"), Iran "heavy assault" threat, and reports of Trump weighing military options. Confirms structural transmission past the Monday move.

            • Value101.37
          • Brent July futures rose +3.2% intraday Tuesday 2026-05-12 to $107.58. Mirrors the WTI move; second consecutive day of 3%+ oil rallies on Iran-deal collapse. Goldman $77.50 target now ~30% below intraday spot.

            • Value107.58
          • Trump on 2026-05-12 morning called Iran's counterproposal "garbage" in remarks to reporters, escalating from Sunday's "TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" and Monday's "massive life support" framing. The successive language escalation across three consecutive days (rejection / mortality framing / dismissal as worthless) marks the diplomatic-track narrative as formally collapsed at the rhetorical level even before kinetic re-engagement.

            • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
            • Date2026-05-12T00:00:00.000Z
          • Trump on 2026-05-12 said of the ceasefire: "I would say the ceasefire is on massive life support, where the doctor walks in and says, 'Sir, your loved one has approximately a 1% chance of living.'" The "1% chance" framing extends Monday's "massive life support" with a specific survival-probability metaphor - the deal narrative is described as functionally dead while threat-and-engage simultaneity continues.

            • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
            • Date2026-05-12T00:00:00.000Z
          • Multiple reports on 2026-05-12 indicated President Trump was scheduled to meet with his national security team to weigh a potential return to military operations against Iran following the Iran response rejection and the deteriorating ceasefire framing. Confirms threat-and-engage simultaneity has tilted further toward engage without yet producing a fresh-fire event.

            • Date2026-05-12T00:00:00.000Z
          • Iran's military on 2026-05-12 warned of a "heavy assault" against US assets in the Middle East if Iranian vessels face more attacks during the ceasefire. The explicit conditional threat raises the kinetic-engagement probability if either side acts unilaterally on the Hormuz shipping front.

            • Date2026-05-12T00:00:00.000Z
          • Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser on 2026-05-12 framed the supply impact of the Iran-war Hormuz disruption as "roughly 100 million barrels of supply each week" with market normalization potentially deferred into next year if disruptions persist. The first major industry-CEO supply-side quantification of the shipping-flow impairment - shifts the energy narrative from "wartime premium that could unwind" to "structural supply impairment requiring months to rebuild even after a deal."

            • RoleChief Executive OfficerGeneric CEO role for OfficialStatementEvidence about company executives.
            • Date2026-05-12T00:00:00.000Z

          Stagflation risk and Fed independence stress

          active 29evidence
          Conf 0.75
          Up to 0.75 from 0.70. The Tuesday April CPI print fired the binary tell that anchored 1.0.8's "right place for the next confidence move" framing. Headline 3.8% (above 3.7% consensus) and core 2.8% (above 2.7% consensus) both surprised hot, with BLS explicitly attributing more than 40% of the headline gain to energy. The lift came WITHOUT the Monday May 11 oil settles in the data (April CPI covers April measurements; the +3% Mon and +3% Tues oil moves transmit into May CPI on the same mechanism). Market reaction validates the stagflation framing: equities pulled back from record highs, oil extended its rally, and post-print commentary explicitly raised the possibility of 2027 hike-pricing rather than cut-pricing. The joint AND invalidation (core PCE < 2.5% for 3 months AND unemployment 4.0-4.5%) requires data the Tuesday print explicitly works against. Capped below 0.80 because core PCE prints (not CPI) are the formal invalidation indicator and the April PCE release is later this month - the CPI is a strong-but-not-final signal.
          April CPI on Tuesday May 12 fired the energy-passthrough binary tell directly: headline 3.8% YoY (vs 3.7% consensus, highest since May 2023) on +0.6% m/m, with the BLS release attributing more than 40% of the headline gain to a 3.8% energy-component move; core CPI 2.8% YoY (vs 2.7% consensus) on +0.4% m/m kept the underlying inflation reading well above the Fed's 2% target. Unemployment 4.3-4.4%, UMich May preliminary sentiment at a fresh record low 48.2 with one-third of consumers spontaneously citing gas prices (national avg $4.54, +44% YoY), year-ahead inflation expectations 4.5%. Multiple post-print market commentaries suggest the Fed cannot lower rates near-term and rate-hike pricing for 2027 is back on the table. Political pressure on Fed independence intensifies into the May 15 transition - 8-4 April 29 dissent was the highest since 1992, the Senate Banking 13-11 party-line advance was historically partisan for a Fed Chair nominee, and the Monday May 11 cloture vote (49-44 with Fetterman and Coons crossing) puts Warsh confirmation on glide path.
          Invalidation condition
          OrCondition 2 operands
          • AndCondition 2 operands
            • Threshold Core PCE YoYCore Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, year-over-year percent change. Fed's preferred inflation gauge. lt 2.5 over 3 months
            • Threshold US Unemployment RateBLS U-3 unemployment rate, monthly release. between 4 over 3 months
          • AndCondition 2 operands
            • Event US-Iran Peace Agreement ImplementedA formal, durable US-Iran peace agreement takes effect. Distinct from a ceasefire (which can be transient) or a memorandum of understanding (which may not be implemented). Pair with `durability: durable`. (durable)
            • Threshold WTI Crude Front-Month CloseFront-month NYMEX WTI crude futures contract close, US dollars per barrel. lt 80 over 30 calendar-days

          Supporting evidence

          Show evidence cards
          1. Fed held the federal funds rate at 3.50-3.75% on April 29 2026 with an 8-4 dissent vote - the most dissents on a single FOMC decision since October 1992.

            • BankFederal Open Market CommitteeThe US Federal Reserve System's monetary policymaking committee. Sets the federal funds rate target. Composed of seven Board of Governors plus five rotating regional Federal Reserve Bank presidents. The Fed Chair chairs the FOMC ex officio.
            • Meeting2026-04-29T00:00:00.000Z
          2. April 29 FOMC dissent breakdown - Stephen Miran preferred a 1/4 percentage point cut at the meeting; Beth Hammack, Neel Kashkari, and Lorie Logan supported holding but opposed inclusion of an easing bias in the statement.

            • BankFederal Open Market CommitteeThe US Federal Reserve System's monetary policymaking committee. Sets the federal funds rate target. Composed of seven Board of Governors plus five rotating regional Federal Reserve Bank presidents. The Fed Chair chairs the FOMC ex officio.
            • Meeting2026-04-29T00:00:00.000Z
          3. Senate Banking Committee voted 13-11 along party lines on 2026-04-29 to advance Kevin Warsh's nomination - the first fully partisan committee vote on a Fed Chair nominee in committee history.

            • Effective2026-04-29T00:00:00.000Z
          4. Full Senate scheduled to vote on Warsh confirmation Monday May 11 2026 at 5:30 PM ET (21:30 UTC). Republicans hold 53-seat majority; simple majority required; confirmation widely expected before Powell's term expires May 15. Warsh would take over at the June 16-17 FOMC meeting.

            • Effective2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
          5. Jerome Powell exits as Fed Chair on May 15 2026; Kevin Warsh nominated as successor. Powell remains on Board of Governors through 2028 (governor term).

            • Effective2026-05-15T00:00:00.000Z
          6. DOJ Powell investigation has been halted, clearing the path for the Warsh confirmation. Creates political subtext to the Fed transition.

            • April 29 FOMC statement said "Inflation is elevated, in part reflecting the recent increase in global energy prices." Explicitly attributes the elevated print to the post-Iran-war oil shock.

              • BankFederal Open Market CommitteeThe US Federal Reserve System's monetary policymaking committee. Sets the federal funds rate target. Composed of seven Board of Governors plus five rotating regional Federal Reserve Bank presidents. The Fed Chair chairs the FOMC ex officio.
              • Meeting2026-04-29T00:00:00.000Z
            • Market is pricing zero rate moves in 2026 and one cut in December 2027, indicating a higher-for-longer rate path.

              • MetricRate Path ExpectationsMarket-implied count of rate moves expected within a stated horizon. Integer (positive = cuts, negative = hikes). Use prose to record the horizon and instrument (Fed funds futures, OIS, etc.).
              • Value0
            • US unemployment rate sitting at 4.3-4.4% - elevated relative to recent cycle lows but not recession-territory.

              • PeriodApril 2026
            • Core inflation has run above the Fed's 2% target for 25-30 years, with the recent pickup making the target appear structurally unreachable.

              • Periodtrailing 25-30 years
            • 30-year US Treasury yield at approximately 5% on May 5 2026.

              • Value5
            • Trump White House annual interest bill on US debt projected at $1.2 trillion - structural fiscal pressure that motivates rate-cut political pressure on the Fed.

              • April 2026 nonfarm payrolls printed 115K versus 185K March; soft labor signal.

                • Reading115
                • PeriodApril 2026
              • April 2026 average hourly earnings +3.6% YoY versus +3.8% expected; easing wage pressure on the inflation side.

                • Reading3.6
                • PeriodApril 2026
              • University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index preliminary May 2026 reading 48.2, fresh record low. Below market expectations of 49.5 and below April final 49.8. Current conditions component dropped about 9% to 47.8 on rising-price concerns over personal finances and major purchases.

                • Reading48.2
                • PeriodMay 2026 preliminary
              • US national average gasoline price $4.54 per gallon as of 2026-05-08 per AAA - +44% from a year earlier on the Iran-war energy effects. About one-third of UMich May respondents spontaneously cited gas prices when asked about economic conditions.

                • Reading4.54
                • Period2026-05-08T00:00:00.000Z
              • UMich May preliminary 1-year inflation expectations 4.5% (down a tick from April 4.7% but elevated). Long-run (5-10 year) inflation expectations 3.4% (down from 3.5%). Real income expectations continued declining from March.

                • Reading4.5
                • PeriodMay 2026 preliminary
              • March 2026 CPI headline 3.3% YoY (released April 10) - up from 2.4% one year earlier per Federal Reserve communications, attributed in part to Iran-war energy price pickup.

                • PeriodMarch 2026
              • April 2026 CPI scheduled for release Tuesday 2026-05-12 8:30 AM ET. First read on whether the energy-driven inflation pickup sustains beyond March's 3.3% YoY headline. Releases under Powell's chair (until Friday May 15) and into Warsh's confirmation week. Monday May 11 oil settles (WTI +3% to $98.07, Brent +3% to $104.21) mechanically lock the gasoline passthrough into the print.

                • PeriodApril 2026
              • April 2026 CPI consensus headline forecast 3.7-3.8% YoY (vs March 3.3%) - Kiplinger, Wells Fargo (3.8%), Barclays (3.7%) and others explicitly attribute the lift to gasoline passthrough. Monthly headline forecast ~0.55-0.70% m/m. Multiple commentaries note the print would push the 12-month rate close to 4.0%.

                • SourceMarket ConsensusGeneric placeholder for "the prevailing market view" when the source is not a specific named aggregator. Use sparingly - typed aggregators are preferred when the source is identifiable.
                • Forecast3.75
              • April 2026 core CPI consensus 2.7% YoY, +0.3% m/m. Several forecasters (Wells Fargo) call for slightly hotter +0.50% m/m and 2.9% YoY. Core has been the relatively-restrained component, masked by the energy-driven headline pickup.

                • SourceMarket ConsensusGeneric placeholder for "the prevailing market view" when the source is not a specific named aggregator. Use sparingly - typed aggregators are preferred when the source is identifiable.
                • Forecast2.7
              • Trump on 2026-05-10 Sunday evening responded to the Iran response: "I have just read the response from Iran's so-called 'Representatives.' I don't like it - TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" Posted via social media within hours of the formal delivery, the rejection materially walked back the diplomatic-track narrative that had anchored markets through May 6-9.

                • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
                • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
              • WTI June futures settled $98.07 on Monday 2026-05-11, +3% (intraday near $99) on the Trump rejection of Iran's MOU response and the Iran-sovereignty demand. The direct price response confirms the structural energy-shock transmission rather than markets shrugging the rejection off. Reverses the prior week's 6% drawdown toward the deal-optimism baseline.

                • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                • Value98.07
              • Brent July futures settled $104.21 on Monday 2026-05-11, +3% (intraday above $105). Mirrors the WTI move on the Iran-rejection / Hormuz-sovereignty demand and the implied Monday kinetic exchange. Goldman $77.50 target unchanged ~25% below settle.

                • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                • Value104.21
              • Trump on 2026-05-11 (Monday) said the ceasefire between the US and Iran is "on massive life support" following Iran's latest counterproposal, which he had called "totally unacceptable" Sunday evening. The framing escalates Sunday's "TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" by attaching mortality language to the ceasefire itself - the diplomatic-track narrative is now formally described as failing rather than stalled.

                • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
                • Date2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
              • April 2026 CPI headline came in at 3.8% YoY (vs 3.7% consensus, highest reading since May 2023) on +0.6% m/m - released by BLS at 8:30 AM ET on 2026-05-12. The print sits half a percentage point above March's 3.3%, and CNBC characterization: "the oil shock triggered by the war with Iran continues to push prices higher."

                • Reading3.8
                • PeriodApril 2026
              • April 2026 core CPI (excluding food and energy) came in at 2.8% YoY (vs 2.7% consensus) on +0.4% m/m - released by BLS at 8:30 AM ET on 2026-05-12. The core surprise keeps inflation well above the Fed's 2% goal and is harder to attribute to the energy passthrough alone, indicating the inflation lift has broader composition than a pure oil pass-through narrative.

                • Reading2.8
                • PeriodApril 2026
              • BLS April 2026 CPI release: energy prices rose 3.8% m/m, accounting for more than 40% of the headline 0.6% m/m gain; food prices climbed 0.5%. The energy attribution is the BLS itself, providing direct statistical confirmation of the Iran-war energy passthrough mechanism the worldview's stagflation thesis has tracked since the March 3.3% headline.

                • Reading3.8
                • PeriodApril 2026
              • Senate voted 49-44 on Monday 2026-05-11 evening to invoke cloture on Kevin Warsh's nomination to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors - the first in a series of procedural and confirmation votes expected through the week. Governor-confirmation roll-call (14-year Board term) follows Tuesday May 12; separate Fed Chair confirmation vote (4-year chair term) expected Wednesday or later; full confirmation expected before Powell's chair-term expiry Friday May 15.

                • Effective2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z

              Gold structural debasement bid

              active 22evidence
              Conf 0.87
              Held at 0.87. The Tuesday backdrop strengthened every structural pillar simultaneously - hot CPI (Fed credibility under stress), oil above $100 (energy-inflation feedback), Iran-deal collapse (durable-peace leg of joint-AND invalidation moves further from firing), Trump considering military options (geopolitical safe-haven bid). Holding rather than stepping up because no Tuesday gold spot print has been verified yet at the 14:06 UTC snapshot timestamp (~36 minutes into the cash session); gold typically does not move one-for-one with daily geopolitical news, and the structural-bull case is robust enough that intraday confirmation is not required. AndCondition invalidation still requires three hard things simultaneously - durable US-Iran peace AND Fed credibility restored AND a sustained 6-month deficit decline - all of which moved further away today, not closer.
              Gold sits in mid-cycle of a multi-year structural bull market driven by central-bank buying, sovereign de-dollarization, $39T US debt, stock-bond correlation breakdown, and Fed independence concerns. Q1 2026 set records on multiple dimensions - LBMA quarterly average $4,873/oz, central-bank net purchases 244 tonnes (highest Q1 ever, +17% QoQ), aggregate Q1 demand value $193B. Spot pulled back to roughly $4,677-4,730 on May 11 from Friday's $4,720-4,740 - inside the normal daily band, not a structural break. GLD Friday close $433.77 (Massive verified). Tuesday May 12 morning state - April CPI 3.8% (above consensus) plus oil breaking $100 plus Trump escalating to "1% chance" framing plus Iran threatening "heavy assault" - strengthens every structural pillar of the thesis, though no Tuesday spot print has been verified at snapshot time. Major bank targets all imply materially higher levels (JPM $5,055-$6,300, UBS $6,200, Citi $5,000-$7,000).
              Invalidation condition
              AndCondition 3 operands
              • Event US-Iran Peace Agreement ImplementedA formal, durable US-Iran peace agreement takes effect. Distinct from a ceasefire (which can be transient) or a memorandum of understanding (which may not be implemented). Pair with `durability: durable`. (durable)
              • Event Fed Credibility RestoredCurator-judged composite event - market-implied Fed credibility metrics improve, no further dissent escalation, no further political pressure incidents. Soft event; no automated detection in v1.
              • Threshold US Fiscal Deficit Trailing 12 MonthsUS federal government deficit, trailing 12-month sum, US dollars. lt 0 over 6 months

              Supporting evidence

              Show evidence cards
              1. Gold spot $4,720-4,740 on 2026-05-08 - highest since April 22 with weekly gain over 2%. Held the bid even as Brent retreated week-on-week, supporting the structural-bull case independent of energy.

                • SecuritySPDR Gold Shares ETF
                • Value4740
              2. GLD ETF Friday May 8 close $433.77 - verified via Massive /v2/aggs/ticker/GLD/prev API call on 2026-05-11. Friday session OHLC: open $434.05, high $436.20, low $431.70, close $433.77, volume 5.38M, VWAP $433.89. Tracks gold spot $4,720-4,740 at the standard ~10.9x divisor and confirms the cash-market bid held through the week.

                • SecuritySPDR Gold Shares ETF
                • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                • Value433.77
              3. LBMA (PM) gold price set a new quarterly average record of $4,873/oz in Q1 2026.

                • SecuritySPDR Gold Shares ETF
                • MetricQuarterly Average PriceAverage price across a fiscal or calendar quarter (e.g. LBMA quarterly PM gold fix average). Pair with `reportingPeriod` semantics if added in v2.
                • Value4873
              4. Central banks added 244 tonnes of gold to official reserves in Q1 2026 - the strongest Q1 for sovereign gold buying on record per World Gold Council. +17% QoQ, +3% YoY.

                • DirectionBuyingNet buying activity over the reporting period.
                • Magnitude244
              5. World Gold Council central bank survey - 95% of respondents expect official gold reserves to increase over the next 12 months.

                • Horizon12-Month12-month forecast horizon from the date of issuance.
              6. Aggregate Q1 2026 gold demand value $193B - record on a value basis.

                • DirectionBuyingNet buying activity over the reporting period.
                • Magnitude193
              7. Stock-bond correlation at 30-year high - traditional 60/40 hedge weakening, supporting gold as a portfolio diversifier.

                • JPMorgan gold price target range $5,055-$6,300 for the next 12-18 months.

                  • Forecast5677.5
                • UBS gold price target $6,200 for 2026.

                  • Forecast6200
                  • Horizon12-Month12-month forecast horizon from the date of issuance.
                • Citi gold price target range $5,000-$7,000 for the medium term.

                  • Forecast6000
                • Bar and coin retail demand 474 tonnes in Q1 2026, supplementing the central-bank channel.

                  • DirectionBuyingNet buying activity over the reporting period.
                  • Magnitude474
                • UAE Defense Ministry reported on 2026-05-08 that air defenses engaged two ballistic missiles and three drones launched by Iran; three people wounded. Per multiple US/regional reporting, this was the biggest escalation in violence since the US-Iran ceasefire was announced four weeks ago. Iran disputed responsibility through state media. Earlier in the same May 4-8 window: a missile hit a civilian car in Al Bahyan, Abu Dhabi killing a Palestinian national; Fujairah Oil Industry Zone hit by a drone causing a fire.

                  • Date2026-05-08T00:00:00.000Z
                • US military reported intercepting Iranian attacks on three US Navy ships in the Strait of Hormuz on 2026-05-07 (Thursday night). No US ships hit. US subsequently "targeted Iranian military facilities responsible for attacking US forces." Top Iranian military command accused the US of violating the now-month-old ceasefire; the US said the truce remains in effect.

                  • Date2026-05-07T00:00:00.000Z
                • 2026 central bank gold purchases projected at ~755 tonnes - a step lower than the 1,000+ tonne peak of the last three years but materially elevated against pre-2022 averages of 400-500 tonnes.

                  • Horizon12-Month12-month forecast horizon from the date of issuance.
                • Iran formally delivered its response to the US 14-point MOU framework via Pakistani mediators on 2026-05-10. IRNA reporting indicates the response covered negotiations on the Strait of Hormuz, the nuclear program, and the lifting of sanctions. The 48-hour response window from May 9 has resolved.

                  • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
                • Trump on 2026-05-10 Sunday evening responded to the Iran response: "I have just read the response from Iran's so-called 'Representatives.' I don't like it - TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" Posted via social media within hours of the formal delivery, the rejection materially walked back the diplomatic-track narrative that had anchored markets through May 6-9.

                  • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
                  • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
                • 30-year US Treasury yield at 4.97% on 2026-05-07 - verified via Massive /fed/v1/treasury-yields endpoint on 2026-05-11. Sustained near 5% across the week (4.98% May 5, 4.94% May 6, 4.97% May 7). Term-premium signal of fiscal stress, supportive of gold and stagflation theses. May 8 through May 12 not yet posted upstream at snapshot time.

                  • Value4.97
                • Gold spot pulled back to roughly $4,677-4,730 on Monday 2026-05-11 from Friday's $4,720-4,740 range - inside the normal daily band rather than a structural break. The structural-bull supports (central-bank Q1 record 244t buying, 30Y at 4.97%, major bank targets implying materially higher levels) remain unaffected by the one-day move.

                  • SecuritySPDR Gold Shares ETF
                  • Value4700
                • Trump on 2026-05-11 (Monday) said the ceasefire between the US and Iran is "on massive life support" following Iran's latest counterproposal, which he had called "totally unacceptable" Sunday evening. The framing escalates Sunday's "TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" by attaching mortality language to the ceasefire itself - the diplomatic-track narrative is now formally described as failing rather than stalled.

                  • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
                  • Date2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
                • April 2026 CPI headline came in at 3.8% YoY (vs 3.7% consensus, highest reading since May 2023) on +0.6% m/m - released by BLS at 8:30 AM ET on 2026-05-12. The print sits half a percentage point above March's 3.3%, and CNBC characterization: "the oil shock triggered by the war with Iran continues to push prices higher."

                  • Reading3.8
                  • PeriodApril 2026
                • WTI June futures rose +3.3% intraday Tuesday 2026-05-12 to $101.37 - the first triple-digit trade since the post-ceasefire drawdown. Move extends Monday's +3% rather than mean-reverting; direct response to Trump rejection escalation ("garbage" / "1% chance"), Iran "heavy assault" threat, and reports of Trump weighing military options. Confirms structural transmission past the Monday move.

                  • Value101.37
                • Multiple reports on 2026-05-12 indicated President Trump was scheduled to meet with his national security team to weigh a potential return to military operations against Iran following the Iran response rejection and the deteriorating ceasefire framing. Confirms threat-and-engage simultaneity has tilted further toward engage without yet producing a fresh-fire event.

                  • Date2026-05-12T00:00:00.000Z

                AI capex sustained but with China decoupling tail risk

                active 18evidence
                Conf 0.85
                Held at 0.85. Tuesday Nasdaq -0.65% intraday on hot CPI and oil spike is broad-market macro noise, not a thesis-specific event. The AMD/NVDA/Micron three-session rotation (May 5 AH +18%, May 8 +8.7%, May 11 +2.4% for AMD; NVDA +1.96% Monday; Micron fresh ATH Monday) was the recent thesis-relevant signal and it held through the Monday close. The May 20 NVDA Q1 FY2027 print remains the binary tell - if NVDA delivers $78B with the +77% YoY trajectory and the H20/MI308 China revenue-share offset materializes against Huang's $50B "effectively gone" framing, the thesis steps up; if guidance slips or the China impairment widens, it steps down. Until the print, today's tech pullback is not the right venue for a confidence move.
                Hyperscaler AI capex continues at elevated pace into 2026 - NVDA Q1 FY2027 (May 20) revenue guide $78B (+77% YoY) explicitly excludes China DC compute revenue, with Huang estimating the unrealized China market at ~$50B "effectively gone with no clear return timeline." AMD Q1 2026 (May 5 AH) materially confirmed the demand side - revenue $10.3B vs $9.88B consensus, Data Center +57% YoY at $5.8B, Q2 guide $11.2B vs $10.3B consensus. AMD Monday May 11 closed up ~2.4% (extending Friday's +8.7% to $455.19), NVDA closed $219.44 (+1.96%), Micron set a fresh ATH at $788.73. Tuesday May 12 saw NDX pull back ~0.65% on the hot-CPI / oil-spike combination - tech-relative drawdown but not thesis-specific. The May 20 NVDA print remains the next material datapoint and the binary tell for the AI-capex thesis.
                Invalidation condition
                Event US-China Export Controls ExtendedThe US announces or implements an extension of export controls on semiconductors or other strategic technologies to China. (durable)

                Supporting evidence

                Show evidence cards
                1. AMD Q1 2026 (May 5 AH) reported revenue $10.3B vs $9.88B consensus, EPS $0.97 vs $0.93 consensus.

                  • SecurityAdvanced Micro Devices
                  • MetricRevenueTotal reported revenue for the period. Currency in evidenceStatement.
                  • PeriodQ1 2026First calendar quarter of 2026 (January-March).
                2. AMD Data Center segment revenue $5.8B in Q1 2026, +57% YoY vs $5.4B consensus.

                  • SecurityAdvanced Micro Devices
                  • MetricSegment RevenueRevenue from a single reporting segment (e.g. AMD Data Center). Use prose `evidenceStatement` to record which segment.
                  • PeriodQ1 2026First calendar quarter of 2026 (January-March).
                3. AMD Q2 2026 revenue guidance $11.2B vs $10.3B consensus, signaling sustained data-center demand momentum.

                  • SecurityAdvanced Micro Devices
                  • PeriodQ2 2026Second calendar quarter of 2026 (April-June).
                4. AMD stock +18% in after-hours trading on the May 5 Q1 print.

                  • SecurityAdvanced Micro Devices
                5. AMD Friday May 8 close $455.19 - verified via Massive /v2/aggs/ticker/AMD/prev API call on 2026-05-11. Friday session OHLC: open $418.59, high $456.29, low $418.29, close $455.19, volume 58.1M, VWAP $441.70. The +8.7% intraday move on Friday extends the May 5 AH print follow-through and confirms the post-Q1 reset of the AMD narrative.

                  • SecurityAdvanced Micro Devices
                  • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                  • Value455.19
                6. Lisa Su (AMD CEO) on the Q1 call: "tens of billions" in incremental MI300/MI325 demand visibility through 2026.

                  • RoleChief Executive OfficerGeneric CEO role for OfficialStatementEvidence about company executives.
                  • Date2026-05-05T00:00:00.000Z
                7. NVIDIA China data-center revenue effectively zero post-Trump export controls, with no clear timeline for return.

                  • SecurityNVIDIA
                8. NVDA $4.5B H20-related charge taken in the prior quarter against the China export-control impairment.

                  • SecurityNVIDIA
                9. NVIDIA H20 / AMD MI308 export deal includes a 15% revenue share to the US Treasury - novel structural offset against the China impairment.

                  • Gartner projects 2026 semiconductor revenue exceeds $1.3 trillion with AI capturing roughly 30% share.

                    • Horizon12-Month12-month forecast horizon from the date of issuance.
                  • Anthropic-Meta and other large AI partnerships continue to extend training compute commitments, supporting the hyperscaler capex demand side of the AI thesis.

                    • OpenAI 6 GW supply agreement signed; multi-year compute pipeline.

                      • NVIDIA Q1 FY2027 earnings call set for 2026-05-20 5 PM ET. Management revenue guide $78B (+77% YoY) explicitly excludes all China data-center compute revenue. Consensus revenue $78.8B and EPS $1.78. The print is the next material datapoint for the AI-capex thesis.

                        • SecurityNVIDIA
                      • Jensen Huang (NVIDIA CEO) estimated the unrealized Chinese data-center market at approximately $50B and characterized that revenue stream as "effectively gone with no clear return timeline." Frames the China-decoupling tail as priced rather than open-risk.

                        • RoleChief Executive OfficerGeneric CEO role for OfficialStatementEvidence about company executives.
                        • Date2026-05-04T00:00:00.000Z
                      • NVDA closed at $219.44 on Monday 2026-05-11, +$4.22 (+1.96%) - extending the post-AMD Q1 chip-stock rally into the May 20 NVDA print. Friday close was $215.20 (Massive verified). Source: Yahoo Finance.

                        • SecurityNVIDIA
                        • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                        • Value219.44
                      • AMD closed up approximately 2.4% on Monday 2026-05-11, extending Friday's +8.7% to $455.19. The post-Q1 follow-through has now spanned three sessions (May 5 AH +18%, May 8 +8.7%, May 11 +2.4%) on sustained chip-stock rotation toward data-center exposure.

                        • SecurityAdvanced Micro Devices
                        • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                      • Micron Technology (MU) closed at $788.73 on Monday 2026-05-11 - a fresh all-time high. Micron posted its strongest five-day performance in 16 years (+30%) as AI memory demand accelerates. Wall Street observing a "changing of the guard in AI" with capital rotating from NVDA into Intel, AMD, and Micron.

                        • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                        • Value788.73
                      • Nasdaq Composite -0.65% intraday in the first session-hour Tuesday 2026-05-12 - tech-led drawdown sparked by the hot April CPI and WTI break above $100. Larger drop than the SPX -0.37% / DJI -0.21%, reflecting chip-stock vulnerability to higher rates and energy passthrough.

                        • Value-0.0065

                      Equity melt-up versus building recession risk

                      active 34evidence
                      Conf 0.7
                      Down to 0.70 from 0.72. The Tuesday hot CPI plus oil-above-$100 combination produced a direct first-hour pullback from Monday's fresh ATHs - SPX -0.37%, NDX -0.65% (tech-led drawdown), DJI -0.21%. That is the cleanest direct response to a thesis-relevant tell since the May 6 melt-up framing was first articulated; the muscle-through hypothesis the 1.0.8 step-up partially relied on did not survive the first hour of cash after the print. RUT +0.33% diverged but is a smaller-cap signal less directly tied to the thesis. Neither invalidation leg fires - VIX still elevated above the 15 melt-up-confirmation threshold AND well below the 25 vol-expansion threshold. The recession-risk leg accumulated incremental support from energy passthrough confirmation, but it's still incremental rather than thesis-breaking. Stepping back to 0.70 rather than further because the underlying earnings backdrop (84% beat rate, 27.1% growth, 13.4% margins) hasn't deteriorated - only the macro overlay has.
                      S&P 500 set a fresh ATH 7,412.84 on Monday May 11 (the first close above 7,400) with Nasdaq Composite 26,274.13 and Russell 2000 2,869.84 also at records. Tuesday May 12 cash pulled back in the first session-hour after the hot April CPI print (SPX -0.37%, NDX -0.65%, DJI -0.21%, RUT +0.33%) on top of WTI breaking $100. VIX expanded to 18-19 range (Monday close 18.36, +6.80%) - still well below the 25 vol-expansion invalidation threshold. The melt-up case absorbed real damage today but is not broken; meanwhile the recession-risk leg accumulated incremental support from energy passthrough confirmation, oil above $100, and post-CPI commentary suggesting rate-hike-pricing for 2027 may return. Q1 2026 earnings season concluded at 84% beat rate (highest since Q2 2021), 27.1% blended EPS growth, blended net margin 13.4% (May 7 FactSet refresh). Invalidation requires either a vol-expansion break (VIX > 25 with SPY breaking 50d MA) or unimpeded melt-up confirmation (SPX > 7,300 with VIX < 15).
                      Invalidation condition
                      OrCondition 2 operands
                      • AndCondition 2 operands
                        • Threshold VIX CloseCBOE Volatility Index closing value. gt 25 over 5 trading-days
                        • IndicatorComparison SPY CloseSPY ETF closing price, US dollars per share. lt MovingAverage
                      • AndCondition 2 operands
                        • Threshold S&P 500 Index CloseS&P 500 index level at the closing print. gt 7300 over 5 trading-days
                        • Threshold VIX CloseCBOE Volatility Index closing value. lt 15 over 5 trading-days

                      Supporting evidence

                      Show evidence cards
                      1. S&P 500 closed at a fresh all-time high of 7,398.93 on May 8 2026, +0.84% on the day. Closed above the 7,300 melt-up threshold for several consecutive sessions.

                        • SecurityS&P 500 Index
                        • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                        • Value7398.93
                      2. S&P 500 Friday May 8 closing print confirmed at 7,398.93, +0.84% on the day. Sixth consecutive winning week (longest since 2024); week +2.3%.

                        • SecurityS&P 500 Index
                        • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                        • Value7398.93
                      3. SPY ETF Friday May 8 close $737.62 - verified via Massive /v2/aggs/ticker/SPY/prev API call on 2026-05-11. Friday session OHLC: open $734.93, high $738.08, low $734.57, close $737.62, volume 47.2M, VWAP $736.54. Tracks the SPX cash 7,398.93 close at the standard ~10x divisor.

                        • SecuritySPDR S&P 500 ETF
                        • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                        • Value737.62
                      4. Nasdaq closed at a fresh all-time high of 26,247.08 on May 8 2026, +1.71%. Week +4.5% led by AI/semis follow-through from the AMD Q1 print.

                        • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                        • Value26247.08
                      5. SPX and Nasdaq both posted six consecutive winning weeks through May 8 2026 - the longest winning streak since 2024.

                        • S&P 500 hit an all-time high of 7,230 on May 1 2026.

                          • SecurityS&P 500 Index
                          • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                          • Value7230
                        • SPX closed at a record 7,365.12 on May 6 2026 (+1.46%) on Iran ceasefire euphoria and AMD Q1 follow-through.

                          • SecurityS&P 500 Index
                          • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                          • Value7365.12
                        • VIX at 17.08 on 2026-05-08. Sits in the 15-20 normal-business-conditions range despite the active Iran negotiations and the imminent Fed transition.

                          • SecurityCBOE Volatility Index
                          • MetricVolatility LevelImplied or realized volatility level (e.g. VIX, MOVE). Decimal points rather than percent (16.88, not 0.1688).
                          • Value17.08
                        • Q1 2026 S&P 500 beat rate ran at 84% (highest since Q2 2021).

                          • PeriodQ1 2026First calendar quarter of 2026 (January-March).
                        • Q1 2026 S&P 500 blended EPS growth 27.1% YoY (FactSet refresh).

                          • PeriodQ1 2026First calendar quarter of 2026 (January-March).
                        • Q1 2026 S&P 500 blended net margin revised to 13.4% (May 7 FactSet refresh).

                          • PeriodQ1 2026First calendar quarter of 2026 (January-March).
                        • Q1 2026 magnitude of EPS beats running 20.7% above expectations.

                          • PeriodQ1 2026First calendar quarter of 2026 (January-March).
                        • Q1 2026 forward EPS guidance running in the 21-23% YoY range, supporting the melt-up case into the next reporting cycle.

                          • PeriodQ1 2026First calendar quarter of 2026 (January-March).
                        • "It's like the markets stopped caring about Iran" - Fortune editorial framing of the May 6-7 melt-up despite ongoing kinetic activity in the Persian Gulf.

                          • RoleJournalistGeneric role for an attributable financial-press author. Used when the press is the speaker rather than the venue.
                          • Date2026-05-07T00:00:00.000Z
                        • Senate Banking Committee minority warning of "misplaced euphoria" in equity markets relative to the underlying geopolitical and Fed-transition risk premia.

                          • RoleLegislatorGeneric role for an elected member of a legislative body.
                          • Date2026-05-06T00:00:00.000Z
                        • Forward P/E sits multi-decade above norm, leaving SPX with little fundamental cushion against an earnings disappointment or vol shock.

                          • CME e-mini SPX futures Sunday session opens 18:00 ET / 22:00 UTC on 2026-05-10 - the first market window for repricing after the Friday cash close (SPX 7,398.93) given the May 7-8 escalation and the May 10 Trump rejection of Iran's formal response.

                            • SecurityS&P 500 Index
                          • University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index preliminary May 2026 reading 48.2, fresh record low. Below market expectations of 49.5 and below April final 49.8. Current conditions component dropped about 9% to 47.8 on rising-price concerns over personal finances and major purchases.

                            • Reading48.2
                            • PeriodMay 2026 preliminary
                          • AMD Friday May 8 close $455.19 - verified via Massive /v2/aggs/ticker/AMD/prev API call on 2026-05-11. Friday session OHLC: open $418.59, high $456.29, low $418.29, close $455.19, volume 58.1M, VWAP $441.70. The +8.7% intraday move on Friday extends the May 5 AH print follow-through and confirms the post-Q1 reset of the AMD narrative.

                            • SecurityAdvanced Micro Devices
                            • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                            • Value455.19
                          • April 2026 CPI consensus headline forecast 3.7-3.8% YoY (vs March 3.3%) - Kiplinger, Wells Fargo (3.8%), Barclays (3.7%) and others explicitly attribute the lift to gasoline passthrough. Monthly headline forecast ~0.55-0.70% m/m. Multiple commentaries note the print would push the 12-month rate close to 4.0%.

                            • SourceMarket ConsensusGeneric placeholder for "the prevailing market view" when the source is not a specific named aggregator. Use sparingly - typed aggregators are preferred when the source is identifiable.
                            • Forecast3.75
                          • Trump on 2026-05-10 Sunday evening responded to the Iran response: "I have just read the response from Iran's so-called 'Representatives.' I don't like it - TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" Posted via social media within hours of the formal delivery, the rejection materially walked back the diplomatic-track narrative that had anchored markets through May 6-9.

                            • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
                            • Date2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
                          • S&P 500 closed at 7,412.84 on Monday 2026-05-11, +13.91 (+0.19%) - the first close above 7,400. Both SPX and Nasdaq set fresh all-time intraday highs during the session; the cash market absorbed the Sunday Trump rejection of Iran's MOU response and the Monday "massive life support" escalation. Source: Yahoo Finance.

                            • SecurityS&P 500 Index
                            • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                            • Value7412.84
                          • Nasdaq Composite closed at 26,274.13 on Monday 2026-05-11, +27.05 (+0.10%) - a fresh all-time high. Chip-stock rotation continued with Micron printing a fresh record and AMD / NVDA extending the Friday post-Q1 rally. Source: Yahoo Finance.

                            • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                            • Value26274.13
                          • Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 49,704.47 on Monday 2026-05-11, +95.31 (+0.19%). Source: Yahoo Finance.

                            • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                            • Value49704.47
                          • Russell 2000 closed at 2,869.84 on Monday 2026-05-11, +8.63 (+0.30%) - small caps outperformed the broad index, setting records alongside SPX and NDX. Source: Yahoo Finance.

                            • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                            • Value2869.84
                          • VIX closed at 18.36 on Monday 2026-05-11, +1.17 (+6.80%) on the Iran-rejection vol expansion. Still well below the 25 vol-expansion invalidation threshold; sentiment-vs-price divergence widens further. Source: Yahoo Finance.

                            • SecurityCBOE Volatility Index
                            • MetricVolatility LevelImplied or realized volatility level (e.g. VIX, MOVE). Decimal points rather than percent (16.88, not 0.1688).
                            • Value18.36
                          • WTI June futures settled $98.07 on Monday 2026-05-11, +3% (intraday near $99) on the Trump rejection of Iran's MOU response and the Iran-sovereignty demand. The direct price response confirms the structural energy-shock transmission rather than markets shrugging the rejection off. Reverses the prior week's 6% drawdown toward the deal-optimism baseline.

                            • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                            • Value98.07
                          • Trump on 2026-05-11 (Monday) said the ceasefire between the US and Iran is "on massive life support" following Iran's latest counterproposal, which he had called "totally unacceptable" Sunday evening. The framing escalates Sunday's "TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" by attaching mortality language to the ceasefire itself - the diplomatic-track narrative is now formally described as failing rather than stalled.

                            • RoleHead of StateGeneric role for the chief executive of a sovereign nation. Specialize per country in domain extensions when the role-name disambiguation matters (President-of-US vs Prime-Minister-of-UK).
                            • Date2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
                          • April 2026 CPI headline came in at 3.8% YoY (vs 3.7% consensus, highest reading since May 2023) on +0.6% m/m - released by BLS at 8:30 AM ET on 2026-05-12. The print sits half a percentage point above March's 3.3%, and CNBC characterization: "the oil shock triggered by the war with Iran continues to push prices higher."

                            • Reading3.8
                            • PeriodApril 2026
                          • April 2026 core CPI (excluding food and energy) came in at 2.8% YoY (vs 2.7% consensus) on +0.4% m/m - released by BLS at 8:30 AM ET on 2026-05-12. The core surprise keeps inflation well above the Fed's 2% goal and is harder to attribute to the energy passthrough alone, indicating the inflation lift has broader composition than a pure oil pass-through narrative.

                            • Reading2.8
                            • PeriodApril 2026
                          • S&P 500 -0.37% intraday in the first session-hour Tuesday 2026-05-12 following the 8:30 AM ET hot April CPI print and the WTI break above $100. First direct pullback from Monday's fresh-ATH close 7,412.84; muscle-through hypothesis the 1.0.8 step-up partially relied on did not survive the first hour of cash after the print.

                            • SecurityS&P 500 Index
                            • Value-0.0037
                          • Nasdaq Composite -0.65% intraday in the first session-hour Tuesday 2026-05-12 - tech-led drawdown sparked by the hot April CPI and WTI break above $100. Larger drop than the SPX -0.37% / DJI -0.21%, reflecting chip-stock vulnerability to higher rates and energy passthrough.

                            • Value-0.0065
                          • Russell 2000 +0.33% intraday Tuesday 2026-05-12 - small caps diverged positively from large-cap weakness even as broader markets pulled back on the hot CPI / oil-spike combination. The mixed cap-segment reaction is consistent with a tactical reweighting rather than a thesis-breaking macro break.

                            • Value0.0033
                          • WTI June futures rose +3.3% intraday Tuesday 2026-05-12 to $101.37 - the first triple-digit trade since the post-ceasefire drawdown. Move extends Monday's +3% rather than mean-reverting; direct response to Trump rejection escalation ("garbage" / "1% chance"), Iran "heavy assault" threat, and reports of Trump weighing military options. Confirms structural transmission past the Monday move.

                            • Value101.37

                          Fed leadership transition policy uncertainty

                          active 23evidence
                          Conf 0.5
                          Held at 0.50. Cloture passed 49-44 Monday with Fetterman and Coons crossing - confirmation is now procedurally locked. The "what does Warsh do once confirmed" risk premium is the active question, which June 16-17 FOMC resolves first. Tuesday's April CPI print 3.8% headline / 2.8% core (both above consensus) under Powell's chair frames the inflation backdrop Warsh inherits - and constrains the dovish-tilt-from-the-chair scenario more than the May 9 baseline implied. The post-CPI rate-path commentary explicitly raised the possibility of 2027 hike-pricing rather than cut-pricing, against Warsh's "room to cut without inflation" framing. Holding rather than moving because the binary collapse of the confirmation question is already in the 0.50 level; the substantive policy-content question opens at the June FOMC, not at the chair-term commencement Friday.
                          Senate cloture vote on Warsh passed 49-44 Monday May 11 evening - Senators Fetterman (D-PA) and Coons (D-DE) crossed party lines, providing one more bipartisan vote than the May 9 baseline assumption. Tuesday May 12 brings the governor confirmation roll-call vote (14-year Board term); Wednesday or later brings the separate vote on the 4-year chair term; full confirmation expected before Powell's chair-term expiry Friday May 15. The 13-11 party-line Banking Committee advance was the first fully partisan Fed-Chair committee vote in committee history; the Monday cloture's narrow bipartisan margin (49-44) does not undo that pattern. Warsh confirmation-hearing framing - "won't be sock puppet" / "room to cut without inflation" - introduces a dovish-tilt risk to the dollar / long-duration cross. The April CPI 3.8% headline / 2.8% core print on Tuesday under Powell's chair sets the inherited inflation backdrop Warsh faces at his first FOMC June 16-17.
                          Invalidation condition
                          AndCondition 2 operands
                          • Event Fed Chair Continuity SignalA new Fed Chair delivers a public statement that markets read as continuity-signaling rather than regime-changing. Curator-judged event based on the speech content and market reaction.
                          • Threshold FOMC Dissent CountNumber of FOMC voting members who dissented from the policy decision at a given meeting. Standardized count (0-4 typical). lte 2 over 1 fomc-meetings

                          Supporting evidence

                          Show evidence cards
                          1. Jerome Powell exits as Fed Chair on May 15 2026; Kevin Warsh nominated as successor. Powell remains on Board of Governors through 2028 (governor term).

                            • Effective2026-05-15T00:00:00.000Z
                          2. Senate Banking Committee voted 13-11 along party lines on 2026-04-29 to advance Kevin Warsh's nomination - the first fully partisan committee vote on a Fed Chair nominee in committee history.

                            • Effective2026-04-29T00:00:00.000Z
                          3. Full Senate scheduled to vote on Warsh confirmation Monday May 11 2026 at 5:30 PM ET (21:30 UTC). Republicans hold 53-seat majority; simple majority required; confirmation widely expected before Powell's term expires May 15. Warsh would take over at the June 16-17 FOMC meeting.

                            • Effective2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
                          4. Warsh Senate cloture vote scheduled Monday May 11 2026 at 5:30 PM ET (21:30 UTC). Two roll call votes scheduled - first on S.Res.690 (en bloc nominations resolution), second on cloture motion for Warsh's nomination (Executive Calendar #728, Member of the Board of Governors). Cloture filed by Majority Leader Thune on April 30.

                            • Effective2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
                          5. Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) told Semafor he plans to vote in favor of Warsh's confirmation, providing a bipartisan support signal.

                            • RoleLegislatorGeneric role for an elected member of a legislative body.
                            • Date2026-05-08T00:00:00.000Z
                          6. Warsh told senators at his confirmation hearing he "won't be Trump's sock puppet" and would act independently of presidential pressure.

                            • RoleFed Chair NomineeConfirmed nominee for Fed Chair, pending Senate confirmation. Statements may carry forward policy implications.
                            • Venue
                            • Date2026-04-21T00:00:00.000Z
                          7. Warsh argued in confirmation testimony that there is room to cut interest rates without sparking more inflation - a dovish-leaning frame given current 8-4 dissent split.

                            • RoleFed Chair NomineeConfirmed nominee for Fed Chair, pending Senate confirmation. Statements may carry forward policy implications.
                            • Venue
                            • Date2026-04-21T00:00:00.000Z
                          8. Fed held the federal funds rate at 3.50-3.75% on April 29 2026 with an 8-4 dissent vote - the most dissents on a single FOMC decision since October 1992.

                            • BankFederal Open Market CommitteeThe US Federal Reserve System's monetary policymaking committee. Sets the federal funds rate target. Composed of seven Board of Governors plus five rotating regional Federal Reserve Bank presidents. The Fed Chair chairs the FOMC ex officio.
                            • Meeting2026-04-29T00:00:00.000Z
                          9. April 29 FOMC dissent breakdown - Stephen Miran preferred a 1/4 percentage point cut at the meeting; Beth Hammack, Neel Kashkari, and Lorie Logan supported holding but opposed inclusion of an easing bias in the statement.

                            • BankFederal Open Market CommitteeThe US Federal Reserve System's monetary policymaking committee. Sets the federal funds rate target. Composed of seven Board of Governors plus five rotating regional Federal Reserve Bank presidents. The Fed Chair chairs the FOMC ex officio.
                            • Meeting2026-04-29T00:00:00.000Z
                          10. DOJ Powell investigation has been halted, clearing the path for the Warsh confirmation. Creates political subtext to the Fed transition.

                            • Trump White House continues public pressure on the Fed to support housing and labor markets and to provide debt-servicing relief through lower rates.

                              • Kevin Warsh has historically been more hawkish than the current dovish-leaning FOMC median, though his "room to cut without inflation" testimony introduces a nuance.

                                • SourceMarket ConsensusGeneric placeholder for "the prevailing market view" when the source is not a specific named aggregator. Use sparingly - typed aggregators are preferred when the source is identifiable.
                                • Horizon12-Month12-month forecast horizon from the date of issuance.
                              • Senator Thom Tillis dropped his hold on the Warsh nomination after DOJ dropped its criminal investigation into Powell - clearing the procedural path for the April 29 committee vote.

                                • Powell stays on Federal Reserve Board of Governors through 2028 governor term after May 15 exit from chair role.

                                  • April 2026 CPI scheduled for release Tuesday 2026-05-12 8:30 AM ET. First read on whether the energy-driven inflation pickup sustains beyond March's 3.3% YoY headline. Releases under Powell's chair (until Friday May 15) and into Warsh's confirmation week. Monday May 11 oil settles (WTI +3% to $98.07, Brent +3% to $104.21) mechanically lock the gasoline passthrough into the print.

                                    • PeriodApril 2026
                                  • April 2026 CPI consensus headline forecast 3.7-3.8% YoY (vs March 3.3%) - Kiplinger, Wells Fargo (3.8%), Barclays (3.7%) and others explicitly attribute the lift to gasoline passthrough. Monthly headline forecast ~0.55-0.70% m/m. Multiple commentaries note the print would push the 12-month rate close to 4.0%.

                                    • SourceMarket ConsensusGeneric placeholder for "the prevailing market view" when the source is not a specific named aggregator. Use sparingly - typed aggregators are preferred when the source is identifiable.
                                    • Forecast3.75
                                  • 10-year US Treasury yield at 4.41% on 2026-05-07 - verified via Massive /fed/v1/treasury-yields endpoint on 2026-05-11. May 8 through May 12 not yet posted in the upstream Fed dataset (typical 1-day lag). Earlier in the week: 4.43% (May 5), 4.36% (May 6).

                                    • Value4.41
                                  • 30-year US Treasury yield at 4.97% on 2026-05-07 - verified via Massive /fed/v1/treasury-yields endpoint on 2026-05-11. Sustained near 5% across the week (4.98% May 5, 4.94% May 6, 4.97% May 7). Term-premium signal of fiscal stress, supportive of gold and stagflation theses. May 8 through May 12 not yet posted upstream at snapshot time.

                                    • Value4.97
                                  • WTI June futures settled $98.07 on Monday 2026-05-11, +3% (intraday near $99) on the Trump rejection of Iran's MOU response and the Iran-sovereignty demand. The direct price response confirms the structural energy-shock transmission rather than markets shrugging the rejection off. Reverses the prior week's 6% drawdown toward the deal-optimism baseline.

                                    • MetricClose PriceOfficial market close, in the security's quote currency. Use this for end-of-session price readings of equities, ETFs, indices, and futures.
                                    • Value98.07
                                  • Senate voted 49-44 on Monday 2026-05-11 evening to invoke cloture on Kevin Warsh's nomination to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors - the first in a series of procedural and confirmation votes expected through the week. Governor-confirmation roll-call (14-year Board term) follows Tuesday May 12; separate Fed Chair confirmation vote (4-year chair term) expected Wednesday or later; full confirmation expected before Powell's chair-term expiry Friday May 15.

                                    • Effective2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
                                  • Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE) joined Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) in crossing party lines on Monday 2026-05-11 cloture vote on Warsh's Fed-Board nomination - one more Democratic crossover than the May 9 baseline assumption. Still narrowly partisan but slightly more bipartisan than the 13-11 party-line Banking Committee vote, mitigating but not removing the historically-partisan-Fed-Chair pattern.

                                    • RoleLegislatorGeneric role for an elected member of a legislative body.
                                    • Date2026-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
                                  • April 2026 CPI headline came in at 3.8% YoY (vs 3.7% consensus, highest reading since May 2023) on +0.6% m/m - released by BLS at 8:30 AM ET on 2026-05-12. The print sits half a percentage point above March's 3.3%, and CNBC characterization: "the oil shock triggered by the war with Iran continues to push prices higher."

                                    • Reading3.8
                                    • PeriodApril 2026
                                  • April 2026 core CPI (excluding food and energy) came in at 2.8% YoY (vs 2.7% consensus) on +0.4% m/m - released by BLS at 8:30 AM ET on 2026-05-12. The core surprise keeps inflation well above the Fed's 2% goal and is harder to attribute to the energy passthrough alone, indicating the inflation lift has broader composition than a pure oil pass-through narrative.

                                    • Reading2.8
                                    • PeriodApril 2026