US–Iran Crisis Edges Toward Prolonged Stalemate

President Trump is warning that the US could restart strikes on Iran, a stance that reads less like a negotiating tactic and more like the opening move in a drawn‑out standoff. A few days ago, he described the fragile cease-fire as being on “massive life support.” In other words, a long, grinding stalemate appears to be taking shape. That’s a threat to the global economy because as the impasse drags on and energy exports from the Gulf remain blocked, the world’s oil supply shrinks and scarcity risks rise.

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Nowcast Points to Steady US Growth in Q2

US economic growth is expected to hold steady at a 2%-plus pace in the second quarter, according to the median nowcast from several estimates compiled by CapitalSpectator.com. This early estimate for the current quarter suggests that the economy may be more resilient to the effects of the Middle East conflict than previously assumed.

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Book Bits: 9 May 2026

House of Fidelity: The Rise of the Johnson Dynasty and the Company That Changed American Investing
Justin Baer
Review via Financial Times
Few companies touch the lives of as many people as Fidelity. The Boston-based financial group directly manages $7tn and administers a total of $18tn, serving an estimated 57mn people, or one in five American adults through retirement plans, investment funds and brokerage accounts.
But the private group is owned and run by a publicity-shy New England dynasty that largely shuns the limelight. That has left customers and rivals to guess exactly what chief executive Abigail Johnson and her team have been up to as Fidelity embarked on a massive growth spurt and pushed well past its money management rivals in terms of employees, revenue and, crucially, profits.
In House of Fidelity, veteran journalist Justin Baer seeks to lift the lid on this enormous company, which employs more than 80,000 people and reported $12.7bn in operating income last year, dwarfing BlackRock, the world’s largest public asset manager.

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Risk-On Returns, but Cracks Still Show Beneath the Surface

A few days before the war with Iran began on Feb. 28, The Capital Spectator reported that “Bullish Momentum Holds Firm in Global Asset Allocation,” based on a set of ETFs targeting multi-asset strategies. The risk‑on profile quickly evaporated as investors ran for cover in the wake of hostilities. But more than two months later, risk appetite is looking resilient once more.

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