Sunday, June 14, 2026

Here's comes the AI bailout: Why government stakes in AI companies are a sucker's bet

When Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump agree on something, that agreement deserves examination. Both are touting the idea that the federal government should have an ownership stake in major artificial intelligence (AI) companies. For Sanders this would be a way for the American people to share in the wealth generated by AI companies that those companies accumulated through the theft of other people's writing, art works, photos, videos and recordings. And it would give government a seat at the table as a representative of the public in deciding how AI companies will operate in the future. Just how Trump views the purpose of government ownership of a share of AI companies is not yet clear.

Problem is, AI companies are not really generating any wealth. Right now they are simply burning through billions of investor dollars that are heavily subsidizing users with no clear path to profitability. And no, the AI industry is not following the path of previous technologies such as the internet and the smartphone in which costs will rapidly fall as the technology matures and greater numbers of people adopt AI. Years into the AI boom the cost of providing its promised outputs is going up, again with no clear path to bringing the cost down. Adding users does not bring down unit costs because more users require more resources. It's the opposite of the software model where the cost of distributing a piece of already written software to the next customer is close to zero.

I warned last November that artificial intelligence (AI) companies were setting the stage for a bailout, one that will be the result of their deeply flawed AI models that won't remotely deliver what they are promising. AI critic Ed Zitron said in a recent interview that when he asks AI industry boosters to tell him what AI can actually do without using the word "will," they have little to offer. Zitron agreed that while search engines are using AI to provide more sophisticated outputs, those outputs have become more unreliable. "You have to check every single bloody thing. You can't rely on anything," he said.

Sunday, June 07, 2026

Our oil "savings account" is dwindling rapidly, more oil price spikes likely

In the coming weeks readers will increasingly see two rarely used phrases in stories covering our dwindling worldwide oil inventories: "operational minimum" and "tank bottoms." The phrases more or less signify the same thing, though the former is more abstract and precise, while the latter is more visual. They signify rapid depletion of existing oil inventories and presage price spikes to come due to the loss of oil supplies from the Persian Gulf because of Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the maritime artery through which 20 percent of the world's oil previously flowed.

Think of it this way: Let's say you are currently spending your entire weekly salary for living expenses. Then, you suddenly have your salary cut by 20 percent. Believing that the cut is temporary, you dip into your savings account to make up for the loss of income. At the current rate of withdrawal, your savings will last four months. As the weeks go by, your savings account balance dwindles as you continue to live in the style to which you were accustomed before the salary cut. Your boss tells you (frequently!) that your full salary will soon be restored. So rather than cut back on your expenses, you keep spending down your savings believing that all will return to normal before you exhaust your bank account.

That's what is happening in the global economy which had about four months of buffer stocks—essentially, an "oil savings account"—to draw from at the beginning of March. We are getting closer and closer to using up those savings which are in the form of commercial inventories. We are rapidly drawing down those inventories to make up for the loss of oil and oil products from the Persian Gulf.

In fact, a recent analysis suggests that the world oil system will start to experience "operational stress" sometime in June. Operational stress "is the point at which the system begins to experience significant functional strain: price volatility becomes extreme, rationing of refined products begins in the most exposed markets, and the margin for error in supply chain management drops to near zero." This analysis takes into account ongoing strategic petroleum reserve releases around the globe and states that "[e]ven full deployment of strategic reserves buys weeks, not months, at current drawdown rates."

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Sunday, May 24, 2026

South by Southwest: Water crises hit America

Policymakers, politicians and the media have been talking about the need for better water policy in the desert southwest of the United States for decades. As the Colorado River, a major source of water for much of that area, continues to shrink, policymakers are having a hard time keeping up with nature. A new 10-year plan contemplates cutting water supplies for Arizona, Nevada and California by up to 40 percent depending on availability. Not surprisingly, these states don't like the plan that the Trump Administration said it will impose on the states since they have been unable to come up with an agreement.

The century-old Colorado River Compact governed water allocations to the upper and lower basins of the river. But the compact overestimated water flows and the states along the Colorado have been dealing with that error ever since. Now, a drought that has spanned more than two decades has made matters worse.

I can remember flying into Las Vegas in 2009, looking out my window and seeing the so-called "bathtub ring" around Lake Mead, the lake created by Hoover Dam. The top of the ring indicated where the water level had previously been before the ongoing multi-year drought noticeably lowered the lake level. Las Vegas was at the time involved in what was essentially an emergency project to build a water intake at a deeper level for fear that the surface of Lake Mead would fall below the current intake and deprive the city of 40 percent of its water.  The water authority succeeded in building the intake, but, of course, that didn't do anything to increase water supplies from the Colorado River.

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Fertilizer, Energy and Liebig's Law of the Minimum

The loss of fertilizer shipments coming from the Persian Gulf as a result of the Iran war got me thinking about the chemist Justus von Liebig, a prominent 19th century proponent of the mineral theory of plant nutrition. Liebig is the popularizer of what is now known as Liebig's Law of the Minimum. The law states that the least available essential nutrient limits the growth of plants. This means once a grower runs out of one essential nutrient, adding extra of others will not make up for the lack of the one that is limited.

Liebig's eponymous law is about to assert itself in a big and distressing way in the coming growing season. That's because the Persian Gulf region supplies 36 percent of the world's urea (a form of nitrogen fertilizer), 29 percent of its anhydrous ammonia (another form of nitrogen fertilizer), 26 percent of diammonium phosphate and 13 percent of monoammonium phosphate.

Just to review a little high school biology, nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium are primary nutrients that cannot be obtained from the air or water and must come from the soil. (With regard to nitrogen, legumes such as soybeans are an exception in that they can fix nitrogen from the air for use in the plant.) Adding these primary nutrients to the soil improves the quality and quantity of plant growth. Huge of amounts of two of the three primary nutrients mentioned above are no longer flowing out of the Persian Gulf.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Chinese ag theft, pathogen research only point up dangers of GMO crops and monoculture

I'm shocked, shocked, to find out that the Chinese are stealing America's agricultural technology!

It can hardly come as a surprise that the Chinese government actively encourages and organizes the theft of intellectual property from other nations and their companies, in this case, agricultural technology in the United States. College students are some of the most active players in these thefts as between 250,000 and 300,000 routinely attend U.S. colleges and universities in any given year, most of them studying in scientific and engineering fields.

Not only is the theft of proprietary seeds an issue, but also research on and transportation of plant pathogens. No one has been accused of actively introducing pathogens into America's farm fields so far. But the combined problems of theft and possible biological attacks on crops merely lays bare the bankruptcy of the modern conventional agricultural system.

Sunday, May 03, 2026

Will the U. S. curtail oil exports as fuel prices rise?

President Donald Trump may soon feel the need to "blockade" U. S. crude oil exports after those exports hit a record high recently, a trend which, if it continues, will increase the price U. S. consumers pay for gasoline, diesel and other petroleum-related products.

Nations around the world are scrambling to secure oil supplies that have been dramatically reduced by Iran's closing of the Strait of Hormuz to oil tankers of "hostile" countries which include major oil exporters such as Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. In addition, the U. S. Navy has placed a blockade on ships from Iranian ports leaving the Strait of Hormuz, though the effectiveness of the blockade is in dispute.

In an April 1 televised address Trump said: "To those countries that can’t get fuel — many of which refused to get involved in the decapitation of Iran, we had to do it ourselves — I have a suggestion. Number one, buy oil from the United States of America; we have plenty. We have so much."

Sunday, April 26, 2026

The Iran conflict and our Wile E. Coyote moment

I believe the global financial markets are now in what I would call a Wile E. Coyote moment frequently depicted in the old Warner Bros. animated series called "The Road Runner Show."  In this cartoon series a coyote while pursuing a roadrunner would inevitably end up running off a cliff and be suspended in mid-air until he looked down and hurtled to the bottom.

I say this because in case you didn't notice, last week we had the first public admission that fear is starting to grip monetary officials as a result of the Iran conflict. The United Arab Emirates (UAE) asked the United States government for a currency swap line, essentially a loan in dollars collateralized by the UAE's own currency.

I believe this event could be the leading edge of a financial panic that will ripple through the global financial system in the coming weeks, one that will bring various markets back into alignment with physical reality. That physical reality consists of an ongoing serious energy shortage and badly broken supply chains which are only getting worse as Iran continues to prevent critical energy and chemical supplies from exiting the Strait of Hormuz (except for its own).

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Why most economists vastly underestimate the economic damage of the Iran conflict

A priest, an engineer and an economist are stranded on a desert island. The first order of business is to get some food. The priest suggests that they all pray. The practical-minded engineer suggests that the three men make a net to catch some fish. But where will they find the necessary materials? The priest and the engineer turn to the economist and ask him if he has any ideas. The economist replies, "Assume a fish."

This well-worn economist joke summarizes one of the chief flaws in contemporary economic theory. That theory almost completely ignores the role of physical resources, assuming they will always be available in the quantities we need at prices we can afford at the time we need them. When those resources aren't available, that theory begrudgingly accepts that there will be some damage to economic activity, but tends to greatly underestimate the impact. This conceptual flaw explains why economists in most financial institutions and governments and thus investors are not especially alarmed at the loss of energy resources as stock market indices remain not too far from their recent highs.

For a good summary of how contemporary economic theory goes off the rails, Australian economist Steve Keen offers a mercifully brief and comprehensible explanation. Here I will relate one critical part of that explanation. About 5.7 percent of U.S. GDP is devoted to procuring and distributing energy. Most economists will tell you that a 10 percent decline in energy availability would have a small effect on the U.S. economy. They would take the percentage of the economy devoted to energy, in this case 5.7 percent, and multiply it by 10 percent to arrive at a 0.57 percent reduction in economic activity.