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Plus: Patrick Radden Keefe on parenting in the age of mega-wealth. 
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AI spending is pretty much driving economic growth right now. You can see it in today’s GDP numbers, not to mention Big Tech’s budget. Oil and gas prices, on the other hand, are giving consumers ulcers. We have more on that below, but first, my colleague Elizabeth Trovall, explains why oil is such a big source of angst. — Carrie Barber, newsletter editor
A red oil barrel with the Mobil logo printed in white.
Gaizka Iroz/AFP via Getty Images
Are markets pessimistic enough about the war in Iran?
After two months, the gap between futures markets and what buyers actually pay is getting wider.
We’ve hit the two-month mark of this historic energy supply disruption, spurred by President Donald Trump’s war with Iran and the subsequent closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

Every day, as countries make their way through inventories and less oil is being produced and delivered, the competition gets steeper for new barrels.

That competition is showing up in the physical market for oil — the very high price you pay to get a barrel delivered today. But that price is different from what financial markets tell us the price of oil should be or will be.

Let’s say a distributor is trying to buy a million barrels of crude oil. It had a contract from a producer in the Middle East, but that oil is tied up in the Strait of Hormuz. So it needs oil now, on the spot market. And for a lot more money.

“The physical market is skyrocketing. We've seen delivery for physical Brent crude going, you know, like $144,” said Joe DeLaura, senior energy strategist at Rabobank.

That’s well above the “on paper” prices being set by Wall Street types.

“It's a divergence of what people think versus reality,” DeLaura said.
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Sunny earnings report pushed Wall Street to more records today and capped off stocks best month since 2020. The S&P 500 rallied 1% to a new high, the Dow leaped 1.6%, and the Nasdaq climbed 0.9% to its own record high.

  • A barrel of Brent crude, the international standard, settled at $110.40 after ping-ponging overnight. The average price for a gallon of regular gas surged to $4.30.

  • Personal consumption expenditures, the Federal Reserve’s favorite inflation gauge, rose to 3.5% annually. That’s the highest rate in nearly three years, courtesy spiking gas prices. Core inflation, excluding food and energy, was 3.2%.

  • The economy grew at an annual rate of 2% from January to March, even amid war in the Middle East. Artificial intelligence investment drove up GDP even as consumers felt the squeeze.

  • That said, the national debt also outgrew the American economy today.
 
Tech
  • Apple revenue soared 17% from the previous year , the company reported today, thanks in part to its subscription services.

  • Alphabet, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft collectively plan to spend about $700 billion on artificial intelligence this year. That’s more than Austria’s GDP.

  • Some Big Tech “hyperscalers” are investing in their own silicon to cut costs. Could they chip away and Nvidia’s dominance?


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“The most difficult thing about parenthood is no matter how much you love them and how much you want to help them, there is ultimately a limit on your control.”
— Patrick Radden Keefe, author of “London Falling”
Keefe’s latest book is about Zac Brettler, a 19-year-old who moved around London posing as the billionaire son of a Russian oligarch before dying under mysterious circumstances. Keefe came on our podcast “This Is Uncomfortable” to talk about how Zac arrived at his secret life and how his parents are trying to make sense of it.
HEAR MORE
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Fed Chair Jerome Powell, standing before American flags.
Gif via CNBC/YouTube
Final note
“He’s Gone”
Jerome Powell likely gave his last press conference as Federal Reserve chair yesterday, but said he plans to stay on as a Fed governor after his chairmanship ends next month. Powell said he aims to preserve the central bank’s political independence after the Justice Department dropped a criminal investigation he said was a pretext for influencing monetary policy. 
 
A reporter followed up: “You mentioned that, staying on as Fed governor, you intend to keep a low profile. Could you give us a little more detail on what that looks like?”

Powell slowly sank behind his lectern.
 
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