General Market News
Hardee's franchisee ARC Burger, LLC filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy and is closing 77 restaurants across nine states. The collapse follows a legal dispute over more than $6.5 million in unpaid fees and royalties owed to Hardee's, with ARC carrying over $29 million in total liabilities affecting more than 5,000 creditors.
- ARC Burger is liquidating all assets across Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, South Carolina and Wyoming, with proceeds going to creditors
- Hardee's sued ARC in November for breach of contract and terminated franchise agreements in September, though allowed continued operations while seeking a buyer contingent on current payments
- Despite allegations that ARC was 'profitably running the restaurants', the franchisee owes $6.5 million to Hardee's and has over $29 million in total liabilities owed to 5,000+ creditors
The Department of Justice has dropped its investigation into Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, removing the final obstacle for Kevin Warsh to assume the Fed chairmanship in May. The probe focused on Powell's congressional testimony regarding a Fed renovation project that exceeded its budget. Powell had pledged to remain at the Fed until the investigation concluded, but may now step down in May after Warsh's expected confirmation.
- Sen. Thom Tillis had blocked a vote on Warsh until the DOJ investigation ended; Powell's term as Fed governor extends until February 2028, but he may indicate next week whether he will serve that full term or leave in May
- The investigation was seen as potentially threatening Fed independence and risked backfiring by delaying the transition Trump wanted from Powell to his nominee Warsh
- Markets expect limited impact from the leadership change, with Warsh viewed as more open to rate cuts than Powell; odds of a rate cut by year-end rose to 30% from 23% following the news
Purdue Pharma's bankruptcy settlement set aside $865 million for individuals harmed by opioids, but over 40% of claims have been rejected due to stringent documentation requirements. Victims must prove they took Purdue-manufactured pills specifically, not generics, using records that are often unavailable years later, leaving many who waited years for compensation unable to collect.
- More than 40% of roughly 140,000 claims already rejected; approved claimants expected to receive only $8,000-$16,000, far less than initially promised
- Victims must provide proof that Purdue manufactured their specific pills, but most medical records don't track manufacturers and many have been legally destroyed after retention periods expired
- Documentation requirements were added in May 2025 with only 60 days' notice, nearly four years after the September 2021 filing deadline, making it harder for victims to obtain necessary records
Chinese AI startup DeepSeek released a preview of its V4 model on April 24, 2025, specifically adapted to run on Huawei's Ascend chips rather than Nvidia hardware. This release represents a significant step toward China's AI infrastructure self-sufficiency amid U.S. export controls on advanced chips.
- V4 comes in two versions: Pro (higher performance, up to 12 times more expensive due to compute constraints) and Flash (faster, cheaper, with weaker capabilities on demanding tasks)
- Huawei confirmed its Ascend 950 chips were used for part of V4-Flash's training, marking DeepSeek's pivot from Nvidia chips used in earlier V3 and R1 models
- DeepSeek said Pro pricing could fall sharply once Huawei Ascend 950 supernodes are deployed at scale in the second half of 2025, though analysts note Huawei still trails Nvidia technologically
The U.S. Department of Justice charged a military official with insider trading on prediction markets after he allegedly profited over $400,000 from classified information about Venezuela's president. The scandal has prompted White House warnings to staff and regulatory uncertainty that led analysts to downgrade DraftKings and Flutter Entertainment stock.
- Army soldier Gannon Ken Van Dyke charged with using classified information about the Maduro capture mission to make $400,000+ on Polymarket bets, facing multiple fraud charges
- Suspicious trading activity includes $950 million in oil futures bets placed 15 minutes before Trump's Iran ceasefire announcement and multiple accurately-timed wagers on geopolitical events
- MoffettNathanson downgraded DraftKings and Flutter Entertainment to neutral, cutting price targets by 27% and 25% respectively, citing regulatory uncertainty over prediction markets
Dallas-based data center provider Csquare has confidentially filed for an initial public offering in the United States, joining a recent wave of companies pursuing listings as investor confidence improves. The company operates over 80 data centers across 30 markets in North America and Europe, providing space, power, and connectivity solutions for enterprise and hyperscale customers.
- The IPO market has gained momentum recently as fears of prolonged Middle East conflict have eased, encouraging companies like Tailored Brands and Jersey Mike's to also file confidentially this month
- Csquare plans to use a portion of IPO proceeds to repay debt, with the remainder allocated for general corporate purposes
- The company maintains strategic partnerships with major technology service distributors including Bridgepoint, Intelisys, Telarus, Avant, and Sandler Partners
China Petroleum Engineering's subsidiary signed a $4.6 billion contract for surface engineering work at Turkmenistan's Galkynysh gas field. The project, set to begin in 2026 and complete within 51 months, will add 10 billion cubic meters per year of processing capacity to a field that currently supplies much of Turkmenistan's 30 bcm annual gas exports to China.
- The contract value totals $4.6 billion with construction scheduled to start in 2026 and complete within 51 months
- The project will build facilities to process an additional 10 bcm of commercial gas annually at the Galkynysh field in eastern Turkmenistan
- Galkynysh currently produces much of Turkmenistan's 30 bcm in annual gas exports to China, making this expansion significant for bilateral energy trade
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk expressed dissatisfaction with EU discussions on rising energy prices following an informal summit in Cyprus. Energy prices have surged due to conflict in the Middle East, prompting calls for more robust action beyond the European Commission's commitment to monitor the situation.
- Tusk criticized the EU response as insufficient, stating there is 'no effective set of actions' to address the energy price crisis
- The European Commission has pledged to monitor Middle East developments, but Poland considers this inadequate
- Energy prices have risen sharply due to ongoing conflict in the Middle East, creating pressure on EU member states
European Union maize planting is expected to fall below 8 million hectares in 2025 for the first time this century, driven by surging fertilizer and energy costs linked to the Iran war. France anticipates a 10-15% decline in maize area (around 200,000 hectares lost), while farmers shift to more profitable oilseed crops like sunflower seed.
- Maize is highly fertilizer-intensive and requires energy-intensive drying in Western Europe, making it vulnerable to cost increases from Middle East conflict
- France's grain maize area could shrink by 200,000 hectares as farmers favor oilseed crops with better margins, though planting is 56% complete versus five-year average
- Germany may buck the trend with a 3.5% increase to 507,000 hectares as farmers' pre-war fertilizer purchases shield them from price spikes
President Trump extended a Jones Act waiver for 90 days through mid-August, allowing foreign-flagged vessels to transport oil, fuel, and fertilizer between U.S. ports. The move aims to reduce rising energy costs linked to war-related disruptions by easing domestic shipping restrictions. The extension adds certainty to markets as the previous waiver was set to expire May 17.
- The waiver permits foreign vessels to move commodities between U.S. ports, bypassing the Jones Act requirement for U.S.-built and U.S.-crewed ships
- The Jones Act remains controversial: supporters cite national security and domestic industry protection, while critics argue it increases shipping costs and limits capacity during disruptions
- The White House stated the extension 'provides both certainty and stability for the U.S. and global economies' amid ongoing energy price pressures
AI data center construction in Pennsylvania's competitive congressional districts is creating political risk for Republican incumbents ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. The backlash centers on rising electricity costs and local opposition to development, with rates up 21.7% in Pennsylvania in 2025. Republicans hold a slim five-seat House majority, and all four affected eastern Pennsylvania districts are rated as competitive or toss-ups.
- Amazon's $20 billion investment and projects from Microsoft and others are concentrated in Pennsylvania's 1st, 7th, 8th, and 10th Districts, all held by Republicans in competitive races
- Electricity rates rose 21.7% in Pennsylvania in 2025, with opponents blocking or delaying 48 data center projects nationwide affecting $156 billion in potential investment
- Bipartisan grassroots opposition has emerged, uniting environmental groups with Trump supporters against data center construction on farmland and near residential areas
The VIX 'fear gauge' is exhibiting unusual behavior by rising alongside the S&P 500 as it hits record highs, a pattern that typically occurs only 20% of the time. This divergence suggests either investors are hedging against geopolitical risks like the Iran war, or traders are aggressively buying expensive call options in high-momentum tech and semiconductor stocks.
- The S&P 500 reached record highs while the VIX remained elevated near 20, up from five days earlier when stocks traded 100 points lower
- Total call premium in semiconductor stocks is 25% larger than put premium despite higher put volume, indicating bullish sentiment in the sector
- A trader spent $2.4 million on nearly 1,700 Marvell Technology call contracts at $180 strike, betting on another 10% rally despite the stock already doubling since last month's earnings
Europe's securities regulator ESMA is raising alarms about escalating cyber threats to the financial sector, particularly as AI models accelerate the speed and sophistication of potential attacks. Chair Verena Ross warned that AI-driven vulnerabilities could coincide with market shocks, creating compounded risks for financial stability. The concerns follow recent revelations about AI models capable of exploiting undiscovered cybersecurity weaknesses.
- ESMA is contacting supervised financial entities to assess cybersecurity defenses in light of AI developments, particularly after Anthropic's Mythos model demonstrated ability to find and exploit previously unknown vulnerabilities
- Ross highlighted the risk that cyber vulnerabilities could coincide with asset valuation corrections, noting current 'very, very high' market valuations driven by tech stocks near all-time highs
- EU regulators have named 19 technology companies as critical third-party providers to finance under new tech resilience regulations, with potential for AI providers to be added later
UK stock indexes fell on Friday and were on track for weekly losses as hopes faded for a quick end to the Iran conflict. The FTSE 100 dropped 0.6% and was set to post its first weekly decline in five weeks, erasing gains made since a U.S.-Iran ceasefire was announced earlier in the month. The Bank of England added pressure by warning that global stock markets are expected to fall.
- Rising crude oil prices on fears of renewed Middle East military escalation dragged the travel and leisure sector down 1.4%, with Wizz Air falling 4.9%
- Heavyweight banks Barclays and HSBC each fell more than 1%, while Mondi plunged 8.2% after citing rising costs due to the Iran war
- British retail sales rose 0.7% in March, though major retailers warned that persistent Middle East tensions are likely to cloud their earnings outlook
The Czech government supports state-owned electricity producer CEZ's plan to spin off its distribution and non-production assets, with up to 49% offered to investors. Industry Minister Karel Havlicek confirmed this move is the first step toward the government's goal of taking full ownership of CEZ's production operations through a buyout of minority shareholders. CEZ, valued at $31 billion, is one of Europe's largest electricity utilities.
- The government currently owns 70% of CEZ and plans to eventually acquire the remaining minority stake in the production business while keeping distribution assets partially public
- The spun-off assets, including customer sales, trading, and power distribution, could be floated on the Prague Stock Exchange with CEZ retaining 51% or more
- The plan requires approval at CEZ's annual meeting on June 1, which is expected to pass with government support
Italian biopharmaceutical company Kedrion warned that ongoing disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz may prevent it from delivering plasma-based medicines to patients in Iran. The company has shifted to land transport for immunoglobulins, but rising fuel costs threaten to make logistics prohibitively expensive. Kedrion produces life-saving treatments for rare diseases and reported 1.65 billion euros in revenue for 2025.
- Kedrion has been forced to transport immunoglobulins to Iran by land due to shipping disruptions, with rising fuel prices threatening logistics viability
- The company posted 2025 revenue of 1.65 billion euros (up 4.5% year-over-year) and adjusted EBITDA of 341.4 million euros (up 22.6%)
- Kedrion operates 76 plasma collection centres globally (68 in the U.S., 8 in Czech Republic) and derives 61% of revenue from the U.S. market
The Supreme Court will hear a case Monday involving Bayer's Roundup weedkiller, with the Trump administration backing the company's bid to limit lawsuits claiming the product causes cancer. A Reuters/Ipsos poll of 4,557 U.S. adults found 78% are concerned about pesticides in food crops, and 63% oppose shielding companies from lawsuits over cancer-causing products, even with warnings. The administration's position has alienated some Trump supporters in the Make America Healthy Again movement ahead of November midterm elections.
- Bayer is appealing a $1.25 million jury verdict from a plaintiff who developed non-Hodgkin lymphoma after exposure to glyphosate, seeking to shut down tens of thousands of lawsuits over Roundup's active ingredient
- Bipartisan concern spans party lines: 81% of Democrats, 78% of Republicans, and 77% of independents expressed worry about pesticide use in crops, with 79% also concerned about chemicals and food additives
- MAHA activists plan a Monday rally outside the Supreme Court and warned the White House that continued support for Bayer could cost Republican votes in the midterms, despite Trump's previous executive order to boost domestic glyphosate production
China plans to restrict leading technology firms, including major AI startups, from accepting U.S. investment without prior government approval, according to Bloomberg News. This move would significantly tighten Beijing's control over foreign capital flows into its strategic tech sector. Reuters has not independently verified the report.
- The restrictions would require Chinese tech companies to obtain government approval before accepting U.S. capital, adding a new layer of regulatory oversight
- Leading AI startups are specifically included among the firms that would face these investment restrictions
- The measure represents China's continued effort to control foreign influence in strategic technology sectors amid ongoing U.S.-China tensions
The oil tanker HELGA arrived at Iraq's Basra port on Friday to load 2 million barrels of crude, becoming the second vessel to reach the terminal since the Strait of Hormuz closure. This follows the Malta-flagged Agios Fanourios I, which successfully loaded a similar amount earlier this month after transiting Hormuz during a U.S.-Iran ceasefire.
- HELGA is loading 2 million barrels of crude at Basra's offshore terminals, sailing under the Comoros flag
- Only two tankers have reached Basra's southern terminals since the Strait of Hormuz was closed, severely limiting Iraq's oil export capacity
- The previous tanker entered the Gulf via Hormuz on a second attempt during a temporary U.S.-Iran ceasefire
China's Commerce Ministry announced an immediate ban on dual-use exports to seven European entities, including German firm Hensoldt AG and Belgian manufacturer FN Browning, in retaliation for their arms sales to Taiwan. The ban applies to goods with both civilian and military applications, such as rare earth elements used in drones and chips. China stated the measures target only specific entities and should not affect broader EU-China trade.
- Seven European defense firms are banned from receiving Chinese dual-use items for participating in Taiwan arms sales or 'colluding with Taiwan'
- The ban covers dual-use goods including rare earth elements essential for manufacturing drones and semiconductors
- China notified the EU through bilateral dialogue channels and emphasized law-abiding European entities have 'absolutely no need to worry'