Dear readers,
Yesterday we asked how long Washington could sustain its dual role as warfighter and market stabilizer. Twenty-four hours later, the answer is becoming uncomfortably clear: not long enough. Treasury Secretary Bessent’s extraordinary intervention to insure crude carriers through the Strait of Hormuz provided barely a day of relief. Brent crude has ripped through $83 and is pressing toward $84 per barrel—a 15% weekly gain that makes Wednesday’s 1.1% dip look like a rounding error. The geopolitical premium Washington tried to suppress is back, and it brought friends.
Yet amid the red splashed across equity futures this Thursday afternoon, the semiconductor sector is writing a radically different story. Broadcom just told the market its AI chip revenue will exceed $100 billion next year. That number deserves to sit with you for a moment. It is the kind of forecast that reframes entire capital allocation strategies—and it explains why the S&P 500 is down only 0.4% rather than suffering something far uglier.
Oil’s Breakout Week: From Diplomacy to Disruption
The Strait of Hormuz situation has escalated beyond what insurance guarantees and backchannel diplomacy can contain. Brent crude near $84 and WTI climbing toward $77 represent a market that has decisively priced in sustained disruption rather than a temporary scare.
The physical evidence supports that pricing. More than 23,000 flights to Middle Eastern hubs have been canceled this week. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer confirmed the deployment of additional Typhoon jets to Qatar, while the US has activated operations from the Diego Garcia base. These are not the logistics of a 72-hour standoff.
For domestic investors, the transmission mechanism is already visible in the bond market. The 10-year Treasury yield ticked up 4 basis points this morning to 4.13%, a move that reflects renewed anxiety about an energy-driven inflation impulse bleeding into an economy that was supposed to be gliding toward rate cuts. Saturday’s newsletter flagged the $100-barrel scenario as the variable that could rewrite the inflation narrative. We aren’t there yet—but $85 Brent is no longer a tail risk. It’s a near-term technical level.
The Warsh Nomination and the Fed’s Institutional Fog
As if the bond market needed another variable, President Trump has nominated Kevin Warsh to replace Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve Chair. Warsh is broadly expected to pursue a more aggressive easing posture—a shift that, under normal circumstances, would send risk assets soaring.
These are not normal circumstances. Senator Thom Tillis is blocking the nomination pending a Department of Justice investigation into a $2.5 billion renovation project overseen by Powell’s Fed. The result is a leadership vacuum at the world’s most important central bank, arriving precisely when markets need clarity on how monetary policy will respond to an energy shock. The question the bond market is now wrestling with is genuinely novel: do you price in the dovish Fed chair who hasn’t been confirmed, or the hawkish backdrop of crude oil that won’t stop climbing?
Alternative assets are offering their own answer. Bitcoin is holding firm above $72,300—extending the safe-haven audition we chronicled yesterday, when it surged past $71,800. Gold, meanwhile, sits at roughly $5,130 per ounce. Both assets are behaving as if institutional confidence in traditional policy anchors is quietly eroding.
Broadcom’s $100 Billion Forecast and the Physics of AI
Broadcom shares surged more than 6% in pre-market trading on what may be the most consequential forward guidance of the year: management expects AI chip sales to exceed $100 billion in the next fiscal year.
That figure does more than validate the AI capital expenditure thesis. It quantifies the sheer scale of infrastructure being built—and immediately raises the question of what physical constraints stand in the way. The energy required to cool the data centers absorbing these chips is becoming a binding constraint on the entire buildout. Infinidium Power Corp., an NVIDIA Inception member, just launched a pre-IPO seed round targeting sustainable AI infrastructure, touting a patented architecture that claims to eliminate traditional cooling costs and cut power consumption by 60%. Whether the technology delivers on that promise is an open question, but the fact that a cooling startup can raise capital on the back of a semiconductor forecast tells you everything about where the AI value chain is heading.
The Talent Exodus That Should Worry Silicon Valley
The hardware side of AI is attracting billions. The safety side is hemorrhaging talent—and the divergence matters more than most investors realize.
Zoe Hitzig departed OpenAI over plans to integrate advertising experiments into ChatGPT, warning the move could erode user trust in the platform. At Anthropic, researcher Mrinank Sharma left the firm, citing the difficulty of reconciling corporate behavior with stated ethical commitments. The UK AI Safety Institute is actively studying the risks created by this dynamic.
The consequences of rushing deployment without adequate guardrails are already surfacing in the public sector. The US Social Security Administration has launched an AI customer service chatbot that the previous Biden administration had explicitly deemed unready. Reports of the bot delivering inaccurate answers on benefit questions are trickling in. For investors pricing AI companies at premium multiples, the reputational and regulatory risk embedded in these deployments deserves more attention than it’s getting.
The Takeaway
The market’s central tension this week is remarkably clean: Broadcom’s $100 billion AI forecast against Brent crude’s $84 handle. One represents the future pulling capital forward at extraordinary velocity. The other represents the physical world reasserting its veto power over financial models built on cheap energy and predictable monetary policy.
The cracks are not hypothetical. BlackRock wrote a private loan entirely down to zero this week—a data point that deserves more scrutiny than it received. S&P 500 futures are off 0.4% as we head into Friday’s session. The critical watch level for Brent is $85: a sustained break above that threshold would force a wholesale reassessment of second-quarter inflation expectations and, by extension, the rate-cut timeline that underpins so many equity valuations.
The dual missions Washington is running—prosecuting a military conflict while stabilizing the energy markets that conflict disrupts—are on a collision course. Wednesday’s insurance gambit bought time. Thursday’s price action suggests that time is running short.
Best regards,
The StocksToday.com Editorial










