Image by Freepik

AI chaos hits software firms with pricier loans and brutal scrutiny

Banks across the United States are now sorting software companies into winners and losers based on their exposure to artificial intelligence, creating a two-tier lending system that is driving up borrowing costs and killing deals for firms seen as vulnerable to AI disruption. The Federal Reserve’s January 2026 lending survey confirms that commercial lenders are…

Read More
squads_cap/Unsplash

European private lenders’ shares plunge as brutal selloff speeds up

Shares of Europe’s biggest listed private-equity and private-credit firms fell sharply on Monday as investor anxiety over the quality of their underlying holdings intensified. EQT, Partners Group, CVC Capital Partners, and Intermediate Capital Group were at the center of the rout, extending a selloff that has wiped out weeks of gains and raised pointed questions…

Read More
Image by Freepik

This California county may soon impose the priciest transit ride in the state

San Diego County transit riders could soon pay more per trip than commuters anywhere else in California if the Metropolitan Transit System (MTS) board moves forward with a proposed fare ordinance update. The potential increase, rooted in historical fare governance records maintained by the state, would push flat-rate bus and trolley fares above even the…

Read More
Image Credit: Dietmar Rabich - CC BY-SA 4.0/Wiki Commons

The economic theory that hypnotized Wall Street and DC might be a total mirage

For decades, a set of economic assumptions about self-correcting markets and rational actors shaped how Wall Street managed risk and how Washington regulated finance. Those assumptions, embedded in formal models used by the Federal Reserve, the SEC, and major investment banks, failed spectacularly during the 2008 financial crisis. The wreckage left behind a trail of…

Read More
a long line of shipping containers on the side of a road

Tariffs are back as the wild card that could jolt the US economy

The U.S. Supreme Court on February 20, 2026, struck down President Donald Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose sweeping global tariffs, instantly throwing $133 billion in collected duties into legal limbo. Within days, the administration pivoted to an obscure Cold War‑era trade statute to reimpose levies, setting up a…

Read More
Tesla store at Tchoupitoulas & Washington, Irish Channel, New Orleans 4 April 2025

No, Tesla isn’t ditching EVs; it’s doubling down and speeding up

Tesla filed its latest annual report with the Securities and Exchange Commission confirming that the company designs, manufactures, and sells “high-performance fully electric vehicles,” directly contradicting speculation that it might pivot away from battery-powered cars. The 10-K for fiscal year 2025, along with record energy storage numbers and Tesla’s January 28 earnings webcast materials, paints…

Read More
shot from a judge gavel on gold bars. ideal for websites and magazines layouts

Gold surges as dollar tumbles after US Supreme Court tariff ruling

Gold climbed to a three-week high as the U.S. dollar slid sharply following a Supreme Court ruling that struck down President Trump’s emergency tariffs, triggering a rapid policy pivot that has amplified uncertainty across global markets. The administration responded within hours by issuing a presidential proclamation imposing a 10% ad valorem import surcharge under Section…

Read More