INTELRUNNER
In fact, it was the first bottom in an exquisite triple bottom. And now wheat's up 22.6% from the first post & even roughly 7% from the second. The gain in the hard was a slight touch better (we'll get to that).
Why short Russia's? Only 62% of export potential due to (1) 25cm of ice in Azov and (2) that strong ruble everyone talks about. What's the other play? A little bit more long-term (2-5 months probably) parsing of wheat types. A recent market update stated:
"HRW wheat basis bids were largely steady in the southern U.S. Plains, with protein premiums rising for railcar shipments to Kansas City, signaling flour mill demand. Spot millfeed values steadied after declines due to ample supplies and muted demand amid market uncertainty."
In other words, we're too low on hard, high-protein wheat, and premiums for moving it are rising, but the ratio is about 1.01x (5Y 10th %ile). It tends more toward 1.03-1.05x historically, and it should. You can't bake bread with the soft stuff.
So it's long Kansas City HRW, short Chicago SRW. This sort of thing requires keeping an eye on both winter wheat condition scores & the March 31st USDA prospective plantings.
Neither this nor the last post contain any financial advice whatsoever...
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INTELRUNNER
Well, so much for that. The improvement from January looks like an aberration. February came in at -92K (well under the expected -50K), the third negative print in five months.
Revisions are biting everywhere: December from 65K to -17K, January trimmed to 126Kโthat's a 69K loss just this year. The preliminary CES benchmark revision for March 2025 total nonfarm employment was -911,000 (-0.6%). Total nonfarm employment growth for 2025 was revised down to +181K from +584K, implying average monthly gains of just 15K, well below the previously reported 49K.
2025 was drastically worse than we were told. Remember that.
Transportation and warehousing down 11K. Construction lost 11K after Januaryโs surge. And Healthcare, which has been the crutch of late, shed 28K amid the Kaiser Permanente strike. But even adjusting for the strike, we're quite negative.
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INTELRUNNER
Well, so much for that. The improvement from January looks like an aberration. February came in at -92K (well under the expected -50K), the third negative print in five months.
Federal Employment has decreased by 327k or 10.86% since January amidst DOGE cuts.
Best employment news we get, but not enough. Don't stop.
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Federal Employment has decreased by 327k or 10.86% since January amidst DOGE cuts.
Best employment news we get, but not enough. Don't stop.
Best employment news we get, but not enough. Don't stop.
Oh, okay, a close second to the last one. Very positive outcome.
From 265K in 2010 to 82K today. Thatโs a 69% employment destruction over 15 years, with no recovery, no plateau that holds, just a relentless grind lower punctuated by acceleration events (2020 being the most visible, when PPP loans & public health advertising lifted most boats).
My favorite is the instant Russiagate endsโit's never been worse for them than that. Now you know why they clung to it so. It wasn't just Deep State pressure.
The YoY chart shows the rate never sustainably returned to zero: it oscillated between -3% and -10% for the entire period, with occasional bounces that all failed. That's the trend of a dying industry.
These days, and really since the pandemic, the wealthy have been purchasing newspapers again (Marc Benioff, Emerson Collective, Bezos, MacArthur, Knight, Hewlett, etc.) and their foundations have been issuing grants with strings attached.
This is where all the remaining life in the industry is, and it has altered the natureโand the already handicapped integrityโof the newspaper sector going forward.
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INTELRUNNER
They're insuring against rising crash potential, as well as against the would-be concurrent spike in VIX.
Oil has only has one greater weekly percent change since the year 2000 (in the year 2000). That would be 2020.
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INTELRUNNER
2025 was drastically worse than we were told. Remember that.
This is the average & median weeks of unemployment length, and the dotted line is the average 2024 value.
The average/median divergence is the key read here. Average weeks unemployed at 25.7 vs. median at 11.1โthatโs a massive spread.
It tells you the distribution is heavily right-skewed: most people are finding jobs relatively quickly (median is only modestly above the 2024 baseline), but a growing cohort is being unemployed for very long stretches and pulling the average up hard.
That pattern is classically associated with structural rather than cyclical unemployment. People are being displaced from sectors or skill sets that arenโt coming back.
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INTELRUNNER
Above are the confirmed casualties across the 12 countries that have been subject to attacks.
Due to the rapidly evolving situation, all figures may change as more information becomes available...
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INTELRUNNER
This is what the strike situation looks like.
Devastation everywhere. Oil production down, desalination down, obliterated U.S. bases and equipment, the hotels the soldiers hide in, damage all over Israel.
It's a crisis in Iran. Schools, hospitals, obviously all the above ground bases. They hit the oil storage over night. The Iranians say it's "deliberate chemical warfare."
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INTELRUNNER
Very grim. Korea is the worst of the three at -7.92%, followed by Japan at -6.92%, then Taiwan at -6.05%โthough TAIEXโs week-long bleed makes its cumulative damage arguably the most severe.
The KOSPI chart in particular shows almost no relief bounce; itโs been a near-vertical descent from the March 3rd highs. This is because Korea runs a more oil-intensive industrial base (petrochems, shipping, steel).
Japan & Korea in particular are 90% dependent on Gulf crude. Japan, Korea, and Taiwan collectively import somewhere in the range of 10-12 million barrels/day, the overwhelming majority of which transits Hormuz.
Tack on a ~$50/barrel move in under a week, and youโre talking about an annualized current account shock running into the hundreds of billions across those three economies.
Thatโs not just an inflation input. Itโs a balance of payments event for Korea & Japan specifically. And I have to mention: yet more shades of 1979 & 2020...
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Oh, well if past performance did that. By all means, bet the farm...
Not like there's anything else going on.
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INTELRUNNER
In other words, we're too low on hard, high-protein wheat, and premiums for moving it are rising, but the ratio is about 1.01x (5Y 10th %ile). It tends more toward 1.03-1.05x historically, and it should. You can't bake bread with the soft stuff.
Wheat is selling, but Chicago soft is selling 4X as much as KC hard today.
215% move in the spread in a little over 9 hours...still a bit too much parity, but I can understand why people are taking some profits on that.
๐ฉโ๐พ I N T E L R U N N E R ๐ฉโ๐พ
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INTELRUNNER
After the surge to $119.48 (due OPEC shutdowns & the Hormuz closure), the White House took several steps to manipulate the price down:
That's a little ridiculous given that's 25-33% of the entire G7 oil reserve and it only relieves the current supply construction for three weeks.
Of course, he also incoherently ranted about "ultimate victory," taking over Hormuz-adjacent islands, and his Administration has repeatedly refused to rule out both ground incursions & a draft. But very often the market hear what it wants to hear, and Trump knows this.
Will it hold? Doubtful. WTI is up 5% since close today. The war cannot be construed as going well, and eventually reality will have to permeate.
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A massive Saharan dust plume drifted across Europe this week.
The cloud is mostly high in the atmosphere, but it has hazed views in the Alps, reduced long-distance visibility on ski slopes, and slightly worsened air quality.
Elsewhere in the world, 27 million tons of Saharan dust reach the Amazon each year, and 43 million tons fall into the Caribbean
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