Senator – Iran as next investment opportunity


A contrarian view on Iran. Iran could be the next big global investment opportunity — if and when the war ends, Adm. James Stavridis, the former supreme allied commander of NATO who is now vice chairman at investment firm Carlyle, told Semafor’s Liz Hoffman. “If we’re allowed to have a tiny flicker of good news, we just had it,” he said after Trump announced a five-day stay of his threats to attack Iran’s electric grid, which provoked Iran to vow to strike Middle East energy and water infrastructure. Despite the ongoing military buildup in the region, Stavridis sees two-in-three odds … Continue reading Senator – Iran as next investment opportunity

Morning Briefing — Tuesday, 24 March 2026 · 06:30 EST · 1,290 words


Introduction Today’s briefing is dominated by a single cascading event: the Iran war entering a volatile diplomatic phase, with Trump claiming “productive talks” and ordering a 5-day pause on infrastructure strikes — while Tehran flatly denies any dialogue occurred. The contradiction is significant in itself. Oil fell 11% on Trump’s announcement before partially recovering; Brent is trading near $100. Alongside the Hormuz thread, the UK took direct diplomatic action this morning against Iran — summoning its ambassador — and there is a new and underreported domestic security dimension: an Iranian national was arrested attempting to access Britain’s Trident nuclear submarine … Continue reading Morning Briefing — Tuesday, 24 March 2026 · 06:30 EST · 1,290 words

Morning Briefing — Monday, March 23, 2026 · 08:23 EST · ~1,310 words⸻


Introduction The dominant story today is a sudden and potentially significant de-escalation signal in the Iran conflict: Trump announced a five-day delay on strikes against Iranian energy infrastructure after what he describes as “very good and productive” talks with Tehran — but the same morning, Israel launched fresh strikes on Tehran and the Hormuz closure remains in effect. Markets are whipsawing on the mixed signals. The secondary cluster is economic stress: Brent above $113, the ECB on hold, and Goldman projecting elevated prices through 2027. The Anthropic-Pentagon case moves to a San Francisco courtroom tomorrow — a structural inflection point … Continue reading Morning Briefing — Monday, March 23, 2026 · 08:23 EST · ~1,310 words⸻

Israel is controlling US actions on Iran


Although Trump red lines get lost in what he says a few hours later, his 48 hour deadline on Hormuz is significant. But I worry more about Israel. They are openly defying yet supporting US at the same time. Quite a feat. More research source Claude.ai Good observation. Israel’s posture throughout this war has been remarkably dexterous — drawing the US in as the indispensable military partner while simultaneously operating on its own strategic timeline. The Natanz strike is the clearest example: Israel almost certainly executed it, both governments declined to confirm, and the Pentagon refused comment. That’s not coordination … Continue reading Israel is controlling US actions on Iran

Morning Briefing — Sunday, 22 March 2026 · 10:23 EST · ~1,380 words⸻


Introduction The dominant frame today is the sharpest single-day escalation of the Iran war to date. Iran has successfully struck near Israel’s Dimona nuclear research centre for the first time — a meaningful penetration of layered air defences — while Trump issued an overnight 48-hour ultimatum threatening to destroy Iran’s largest power plant if Hormuz is not fully reopened by Monday evening. Iran’s parliament speaker has responded by explicitly threatening to irreversibly destroy all Gulf energy infrastructure if attacked. Simultaneously, Iran’s first confirmed long-range ballistic missile strike against the UK-US Diego Garcia base introduces a new strategic register — one … Continue reading Morning Briefing — Sunday, 22 March 2026 · 10:23 EST · ~1,380 words⸻

Morning Briefing — Saturday, 21 March 2026 · EST · ~1,380 words⸻


Introduction The war in its fourth week is showing its first signals of potential de-escalation — Trump floated “winding down” — while simultaneously intensifying its structural blowback: UK base authorisation for Hormuz strikes, Iraqi force majeure, fertiliser markets cracking, and Brent holding above $109. The news environment today is distinctly bifurcated: kinetic signals easing at the top, cascading economic and food system consequences accelerating underneath. Separately, a major US securities verdict against Musk, the CUSMA talks formally open, and the EU AI Omnibus enters Parliament — all substantial in their own right, all somewhat crowded out by the dominant Iran … Continue reading Morning Briefing — Saturday, 21 March 2026 · EST · ~1,380 words⸻

Morning Briefing — Friday, 20 March 2026 · EST · ~1,320 words⸻


Introduction Today is Day 21 of the US-Israel war on Iran — and also Nowruz, the Persian New Year — lending the conflict a symbolic resonance that both sides are exploiting. The dominant tone is escalatory: Gulf energy infrastructure is taking direct hits, Trump is alienating NATO allies in real time, and the Hormuz chokepoint remains effectively closed. A secondary but significant story breaks today in tech: the highest-profile AI chip smuggling indictment to date hits Super Micro’s co-founder. Markets are reflecting both — energy is the only sector in the green on the S&P for the fourth consecutive down … Continue reading Morning Briefing — Friday, 20 March 2026 · EST · ~1,320 words⸻

Morning Briefing — Friday, March 20, 2026 · Toronto time · ~1,350 words


Morning Briefing — Friday, March 20, 2026 · Toronto time · ~1,350 words Introduction Day 20 of Operation Epic Fury is the dominant fact of the morning — and it is getting materially worse. Israel struck Iran’s South Pars gas field overnight; Iran responded by hitting energy infrastructure across Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE; Brent is now above $115/barrel. The intelligence governance story behind the war is equally significant today: the documented gap between Gabbard’s written and oral Senate testimony has sharpened the question of whether this war was launched on manufactured casus belli — a development with structural … Continue reading Morning Briefing — Friday, March 20, 2026 · Toronto time · ~1,350 words

Morning Briefing — Thursday, 19 March 2026 · Toronto time · ~1,350 words


Introduction Iran’s energy war crossed a material threshold overnight: a second strike on Ras Laffan has now caused “extensive damage” to infrastructure already offline since March 2, while Brent oil briefly hit $119 and Dutch gas futures spiked. EU leaders opened in Brussels this morning with a packed agenda — Hungary’s Ukraine loan veto, rearmament, competitiveness — and found it immediately dominated by a live energy shock. The [PT] thread is also breaking into the open: the Joe Kent resignation has planted Mearsheimer-Walt framing inside a senior US official’s public record, and a Tucker Carlson interview is expected imminently. Two … Continue reading Morning Briefing — Thursday, 19 March 2026 · Toronto time · ~1,350 words

Morning Briefing — Wednesday, 18 March 2026 ·


Toronto time · ~1,320 words briefing Introduction Day 19 of the US-Israel-Iran war opens with the most significant leadership decapitation since Khamenei: Ali Larijani — Iran’s top security official and most prominent surviving voice of the regime — confirmed killed overnight by Israel, alongside Basij commander Gholam Reza Soleimani. Iran’s response was immediate and escalatory: multi-warhead ballistic missiles on central Israel, killing two in Ramat Gan; fresh barrages on Gulf states; and a categorical restatement that Hormuz remains closed. On the home front, the Kent resignation is producing its first-order political effects inside MAGA world, with the [PT] thread now … Continue reading Morning Briefing — Wednesday, 18 March 2026 ·