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‘Project Hail Mary’ is now streaming — Here’s how to watch at home

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
Amaze. Amaze. Amaze.
Angela Tricarico

Majority of US to experience severe heat, storms and dreary conditions thanks to omega weather pattern

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
Forecasters predict that, given the current weather pattern, a surge of southerly winds could reach the Northwest US, potentially bringing record heat and rain.
FOX Weather

Cause of death revealed for famed composer who dropped dead on top of notorious mountain

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
The death marks the second fatal incident on the Mount Wilson Trail this month after another hiker reportedly fell to his death earlier in May.
Zain Khan

Why Cardi B is giving Stefon Diggs ‘another shot’: report

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
The Grammy winner and the athlete's reconciliation comes days after they were spotted packing on the PDA at a Mother’s Day event on Saturday.
mliss1578

Why Cardi B is giving Stefon Diggs ‘another shot’: report

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
The Grammy winner and the athlete's reconciliation comes days after they were spotted packing on the PDA at a Mother’s Day event on Saturday.
Tamantha Ryan

Massive Life Support

Zero Rss
1 month 1 week ago
Massive Life Support

By Benjamin Picton, Senior Markets Strategist At Rabobank

Massive Live Support

“On massive life support” was Donald Trump’s characterization of the US-Iran ceasefire yesterday. This followed Sunday’s rejection of Iranian terms for peace that Trump described as “totally unacceptable”. In a boy-who-cried-wolf-style sign of growing market insensitivity to Presidential prognostications, Brent was only up 2.88% to $104.21/bbl and WTI crude remains below $100/bbl. Dated Brent rose by 0.6% yesterday to $105.62. This even as the Wall Street Journal reports that the UAE has been “secretly” carrying out attacks on Iran, including on refining infrastructure. 

US equities closed broadly higher but European stocks were mixed. The FTSE100 eked out gains despite (because of?) fresh signs that Keir Starmer’s premiership is also on “massive life support” as more than 70 of his own MPs have now publicly voiced opinions that the Prime Minister should go following last week’s shellacking at the hands of the Reform party in local government elections. The French CAC40 fell by 0.69% and the German DAX was virtually unchanged. Asian stocks also had a mixed session earlier in the day with losses for Japanese and Australian indices, but gains for chip-heavy markets in China, South Korea and Taiwan.

Bond markets have been more unified in their gloom over the last 24 hours. Yields on US 10s were unchanged at 4.41%, but virtually everywhere else saw chunky rises in benchmark borrowing costs. Yields on 10-year OATs were up 3.9bps, 3.5bps for Bunds, while Gilts saw yields spike 8.6bps in a sign that bond traders might be thinking it’s a case of “better the devil you know” when it comes left-of-centre Prime Ministers in the UK.

With the prime ministerial instability gauge now well and truly pointed towards “embattled”, Starmer gave a speech yesterday that was intended to strike a tone of defiance and send the message that he wouldn’t be going anywhere. In that speech he suggested that he had not been sufficiently radical in forcing the pace of change, that the UK needed to forge closer military and economic ties with the EU, and that “if we don’t get this right, our country will go down a very dark path” - by which he presumably means it would elect Nigel Farage as his replacement.

This might sound like a curious response to the rising appeal of a Eurosceptic party channelling popular sentiment that the country has already changed too much, too fast, while the incumbent government’s revealed lack of electoral appeal suggests that many voters think the country is already headed down a very dark path under Starmer’s leadership. The implication here is that Starmer isn’t really fighting Reform, but the rise of the left-wing Green party who are siphoning off erstwhile Labour votes. Clearly, the center cannot hold and we should expect even more intense polarisation ahead, and probably more damage to the budget. Whither the Gilt market?

Speaking of budgets, Starmer isn’t the only Anglosphere Labour leader saying that things aren’t changing fast enough. Australian PM Albanese made the same comment in relation to his country’s poisonously expensive housing market this week as his Treasurer prepares to deliver the Commonwealth budget later today.

As is now the norm for budgets, most of the major initiatives have been strategically leaked well in advance and a wind-back of investor tax concessions has been telegraphed as a social cohesion measure to placate Gen Zs angry about their effect on house prices (for our detailed thoughts on this, see here). The budget is also expected to introduce new rules for discretionary trust distributions to be taxed at the company rate (to reduce their appeal as a tax-minimisation device) alongside measures to boost defence spending and cut the pace of growth in the welfare state – something that Starmer was unable to secure support for among his own MPs.

Treasurer Chalmers has said there will be a focus on resilience with “more than the usual amount of savings, and more than the usual amount of [tax] reform”. Overall, the vibe seems to be a tightening of fiscal settings – which ought to be welcomed by the RBA – coupled with tax nudges to direct a greater volume of capital toward the productive sectors of the economy rather than allowing it to congeal in the housing market. Whither Aussie bonds?

Of course, while all this is going on the Strait of Hormuz remains functionally closed and world fertilizer and energy markets are treading air like Wile-e-Coyote run off the cliff. Donald Trump will be traveling to Beijing tomorrow to meet with Xi Jinping. Finding a resolution to the war is sure to be at the top of the agenda, with Trump likely to press Xi to lean on his Iranian and Russian allies to seek peace in their respective theatres. Russia has made conciliatory noises in recent days, while Iran has indicated a willingness to hand over some highly enriched uranium to an unspecified third party (Russia?). Is there a grand bargain to be made?

In a case of curious timing, the US just imposed fresh sanctions on individuals and firms involved in facilitating Iranian oil sales to China, and Acting Secretary of the Navy Hung Cao yesterday released a new 30-year shipbuilding plan. That plan anticipates the acquisition of 11 nuclear-powered Trump class battleships, new underwater drones, and an ongoing review to the Ford class aircraft carrier design to increase lethality and reliability while reducing unit costs and production lead times. The planned expansion of the US fleet and shipbuilding industrial base is undoubtedly a reaction to China’s growing naval strength and substantial advantage in production capacity. The message to Xi is an unsubtle one.

The FT’s Gideon Rachman characterises Trump as arriving at Xi’s court in a state of supplication, having effectively lost the trade war vs China and the shooting war vs Iran. This perhaps overstates the weakness of Trump’s position by ignoring the fact that the US has tightened its grip on global energy supply chains and has shown that is has the power to put its foot on the hosepipe of Chinese energy imports whenever it likes. In the flurry of commentary over China’s bumper trade surplus in April, it seems to have been missed that import volumes for crude oil were down sharply, but values were higher. Yesterday’s April PPI figures for China also underscored the uncomfortable effects that the Iran war is having on the Chinese industrial economy.

Xi will be acutely aware of this, and he will also be aware that the US holds similar power to disrupt Chinese food imports if it was of a mind to do so. Seapower IS power, as the shipbuilding plan should remind us all. In this respect, Trump holds better cards than the FT is giving him credit for. Perhaps it is no coincidence that China bought more soybeans in April than it had done for months.

Tyler Durden Tue, 05/12/2026 - 10:25
Tyler Durden

10 travel mistakes that could turn you into ‘patient zero’

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
“Patient zero often begins with the sentence: ‘I didn’t think that mattered.'" physician-scientist Dr. Steven Quay told The Post.
McKenzie Beard

Wild West relics — including Butch Cassidy’s mugshot — to be auctioned

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
The May 21 auction spans frontier-era manuscripts, early photography, and historical relics — an unusually broad cross-section for a single-owner Western Americana offering.
SWNS

Kylie Jenner’s luxe Mother’s Day PJs are perfect for Sunday lounging

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
The Kylie Cosmetics founder is a longtime brand fan — as are Jennifer Lopez and Meghan Markle.
mliss1578

Kylie Jenner’s luxe Mother’s Day PJs are perfect for Sunday lounging

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
The Kylie Cosmetics founder is a longtime brand fan — as are Jennifer Lopez and Meghan Markle.
Erica Radol

Trump: Iran cease-fire on ‘massive life support’

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
President Trump cast doubt on the future of the Iran cease-fire Monday, saying the agreement was “on massive life support” after Tehran’s latest proposal reportedly lacked nuclear concessions. Trump joked the truce had just a “1% chance of living” while speaking alongside Dr. Mehmet Oz at a White House maternal health event.
New York Post Video

Costco got rid of a menu item customers hated — but they’re not happy about what replaced it either: ‘What the eff?’

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
"Costco food courts overseas get adult food like sushi and rice bowls and we just get more ultra-processed kids food."
Brooke Steinberg

‘Euphoria’ Star Sam Trammell Was Also Taken Aback By His Industrial-Sized Saran Wrap Sex Scene: “It Was Completely Unexpected”

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
The True Blood alum had three days to go from full-on vacation mode to shooting sex scenes on Euphoria.
mliss1578

Top LA restaurateur is snared by ICE agents after his own worker blew the lid on his kitchen secret

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
Masked ICE agents took a popular Los Angeles restaurateur into custody, putting him on the chopping block for potential deportation.
Ross O'Keefe

Anthropic Voids Unauthorized Share Transfers, Triggering Bloodbath In Tokenized Markets

Zero Rss
1 month 1 week ago
Anthropic Voids Unauthorized Share Transfers, Triggering Bloodbath In Tokenized Markets

Anthropic warned investors that any unapproved sale or transfer of its private shares, including those packaged through tokenized products, is void and will not be recognized on the company’s books, escalating tensions over how restricted pre-IPO equity can be repackaged for retail traders. 

The AI company behind Claude quietly updated its investor-warning page Monday, stating that both preferred and common stock are subject to transfer restrictions contained in its bylaws. The notice, first published in February and revised this week, explicitly bans special purpose vehicles from acquiring its stock and casts doubt on structures claiming economic exposure to Anthropic shares.

“Any sale or transfer of Anthropic stock, or any interest in Anthropic stock, that has not been approved by our Board of Directors is void and will not be recognized on our books and records,” the company said. “This means that if someone purports to sell Anthropic shares without proper board approval, that transaction is invalid.”

Anthropic added that it does not permit special purpose vehicles to acquire its stock and that any such transfers are void. It also warned that third parties offering Anthropic shares to the public through direct sales, forward contracts, tokenized securities, or similar mechanisms are likely engaged in fraud or offering investments that may have no value.

"We do not permit special purpose vehicles (SPVs) to acquire Anthropic stock and any transfer of shares to an SPV are void under our transfer restrictions. Offers to invest in Anthropic’s past or future financing rounds through an SPV are prohibited." 

The company listed several firms as unauthorized, including Open Door Partners, Unicorns Exchange, Pachamama, Lionheart Ventures, Sydecar, Upmarket, and new offerings on Hiive and Forge Global.

Tokenized Markets in the Crosshairs

The update directly addresses the growing market for tokenized pre-IPO exposure. Over the past year, crypto platforms have created offerings tied to high-profile private companies such as Anthropic, SpaceX, and others. Some products are synthetic perpetuals that track implied valuations without holding underlying shares. Others, including certain tokenized offerings on PreStocks, aim to provide economic exposure through SPVs or secondary holdings.

Anthropic just published a statement that should terrify anyone buying private AI shares on secondary markets.

>>>>“Any sale or transfer of Anthropic stock… that has not been approved by our Board of Directors is void.”

Not restricted.
Not disputed.
Not under review.

Void.… pic.twitter.com/HjILRsdBku

— Swati Gupta (@hrswatigupta) May 12, 2026

PreStocks’ terms state that buyers receive no equity or shareholder rights in the underlying company, only economic exposure tied to reserve backing. However, the platform does not specify whether its Anthropic-linked tokens are structured through an SPV, leaving uncertainty around compliance with Anthropic’s restrictions.

PreStocks’ terms of service state that buyers receive no equity or shareholder rights in the underlying company, only economic exposure tied to reserve backing, However, it does not specify whether this exposure is delivered through a special purpose vehicle, leaving uncertainty around the exact structure behind its Anthropic-linked tokens, which the company says may be invalid.

That model may be more intuitive to investors, but it also runs more directly into the restrictions private companies place on who can buy, sell or hold interests in their stock. -Coindesk

Tokenized markets can generate eye-popping implied valuations even with limited underlying assets. PreStocks’ dashboard recently showed an implied valuation for Anthropic above $1.5 trillion and a market valuation around $1.37 trillion, despite the platform holding roughly $23 million in total assets, according to CoinDesk. Such prices create narrative and valuation risks that private companies cannot fully control. 

Florida-based crypto lawyer John Montague told the outlet last year "I think private companies may also initiate lawsuits alleging that this violates their governance documents, shareholders' agreements, investor rights agreements, or bylaws," adding "I view it as the issuer’s right to control the terms of transfer."

The Anthropic-linked token on PreStocks fell nearly 25% in a single day following the announcement, dropping to $1,023.90.

crypto.com

No public responses from the named platforms or firms had been issued as of Tuesday. The move follows a similar policy clarification by OpenAI and is expected to increase scrutiny of secondary and tokenized markets for private technology companies.

Anthropic, valued at $380 billion following its February funding round, directed equity-related inquiries to a dedicated email address and urged investors to verify offerings through regulatory channels and seek independent advice.

The frenzy around Anthropic equity has reached unusual levels. Last month, Bay Area investment banker Storm Duncan offered his $4.8 million Mill Valley estate in exchange for Anthropic shares rather than cash, highlighting how illiquid and highly sought-after the company’s pre-IPO stock has become.

The company has not issued further public comment beyond the updated notice.

Tyler Durden Tue, 05/12/2026 - 10:05
Tyler Durden

When Does ‘Perfect Match’ 2026 Come Out? Season 4 Premiere Date, Cast, And More

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
A new group of reality stars is looking for their perfect match!
mliss1578

‘Dungeon Crawler Carl’ author Matt Dinniman’s shares his six favorite books

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
Dinniman's book "A Parade of Horribles," out now, is the eighth book in his wildly popular "Dungeon Crawler Carl" series.
mliss1578

‘Dungeon Crawler Carl’ author Matt Dinniman’s shares his six favorite books

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
Dinniman's book "A Parade of Horribles," out now, is the eighth book in his wildly popular "Dungeon Crawler Carl" series.
Lindsey Kupfer

Groom sobs as he’s given life sentence for murdering his best friend on his wedding night

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
"When I got to him all I could see was blood," said the victim's cousin.
Anthony Blair

Pete Davidson’s depressing five word acceptance speech at New York award show revealed

NY Post
1 month 1 week ago
Last night, the 30th annual Webby Awards honored the year’s biggest online types at Cipriani Wall Street in New York, one of whom was "SNL" alum Pete Davidson.
mliss1578

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News feeds

  • Feeling Emboldened After Attacks On Moscow, Zelensky Threatens Belarus With Military Action
  • Billionaire Tax Officially Heads To Nov. 3 Ballot
  • Betting Against Ourselves: The Casino-ization Of America
  • Vance In Switzerland Projects Cautious Optimism While Trump Reminds Iran Of 'Harder' Military Options On Table
  • Kremlin Skeptical That US-Iran Peace Can Be Achieved: 'Rash'
  • Swiss Government Discusses Revoking Protections, Benefits For Military-Aged Ukrainians
  • Windward Says "Zero AIS Transits" On Hormuz Chokepoint
  • Gabbard Drops Fauci COVID-19 Receipts On Last Day: He Funded The Research, Cooked The Cover Story, Then Lied To Congress
  • BBC Flagship Soap Being Used To Push Pro-Migrant Propaganda By Activist Infiltrators
  • Poland Revokes Top Award From Zelensky As Row Over Nazi Symbolism Deepens
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