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Getting off work on a Friday always feels good, but heading into the weekend knowing the feds dropped your criminal investigation? That must be amazing. Fed Chair Jerome Powell, go ahead and throw on  “Ripple.”

The Justice Department announced it was no longer looking into his handling of the Fed’s multibillion-dollar headquarter investigation. Powell has long said the investigation was part of the White House’s ongoing, unprecedented pressure campaign to lower interest rates. As “Marketplace” host Kai Ryssdal pointed out this morning, this retreat clears the way for President Donald Trump’s pick to win Senate confirmation. We’ll have more on that story below.

Plus, “tokenmaxxing,” the informal economy and oil prices. First, my colleague Sabri Ben-Achour explains the tricky business of war insurance for tankers stuck in the Strait of Hormuz. — Tony Wagner and Carrie Barber, newsletter editors
A ship near the Strait of Hormuz.
Getty Images
Insurance rates have spiked for vessels around the Strait of Hormuz
Ships can get cheap war insurance during peacetime, but policies often get canceled after war actually breaks out.
There are at least 2,000 ships and 20,000 crew members trapped on the waters of the Persian Gulf as one of the world’s largest shipping lanes remains clogged. Around 800 are stuck in the Strait of Hormuz.

If they want to get out, they’re going to need safe passage. But they’re also going to need insurance.

Ships can technically move without insurance — they just can’t go anywhere.

“They will not be accepted at any port,” said Rahul Kapoor, vice president and global head of shipping and metals with S&P Global Energy.

No port in its right mind would let a ship that doesn’t have liability insurance pull up. But ships also need to insure themselves.

“What’s called hull and machinery, so that covers damage to the vessel itself. These are the two core insurances which a ship needs,” Kapoor said.

Small issue: None of them apply in a war. 

“And this is typical of insurance policies, right?” said Brandan Holmes, vice president-senior credit officer at Moody’s Ratings. “‘We cover a range of things except this,’ and war is excluded.”

So, ships have to get war insurance. But one more small issue: The war insurance gets canceled if there’s an actual war. Not immediately, but pretty darn fast.

“Seventy-two hours to seven days, but we’ve heard cases where it can be done in 24-48 hours,” Holmes said.
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Wall Street had another record day. The S&P 500 climbed 0.8% to an all-time high. The Dow dipped 0.2%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq rallied 1.6% to another new record.

  • A barrel of Brent crude, the international standard, rose 3.1% to $105.07 today. The national average for a gallon of regular gas ticked up to $4.05.

  • Procter & Gamble’s net sales are up 7% from the previous year. It wasn’t just because of higher prices; consumers are buying more Pampers, Bounty and Charmin.
 
Tech
  • Intel stock rocketed 24%, its best day since 1987, after reporting revenue of 7.1% in the first quarter. The AI boom has fueled demand for its chips. 
  • Large companies are blowing past their artificial intelligence budgets, a Goldman Sachs survey said, and soon they could equal engineers’ salaries. Can companies justify their “tokenmaxxing”?

Government
  • The Justice Department dropped its criminal investigation of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell today, clearing the way for confirmation of his successor. U.S. Attorney Jeannine Pirro said the Fed’s inspector general would instead look into renovation spending on the central bank’s building. 
  • A special forces soldier faces charges of using classified information to place lucrative Polymarket bets on Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s ouster. President Trump compared the alleged insider trading to Pete Rose: “If he bet against his team, that would be no good. But he bet on his own team.”

  • If you’re a babysitter, dog walker, or street vendor, you’re part of the informal economy — gigs that aren’t taxed and are largely invisible to official statistics.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“Our labor market is not a fixed pie distributed among immigrant workers and U.S.-born workers. Instead, it's much more dynamic.”
— Chloe East, University of Colorado Boulder economist
President Trump has pitched his immigration crackdown as a way to protect American jobs. East’s research shows mass deportations actually reduce opportunities for U.S.-born workers instead of creating more jobs. One example: Labor force participation fell in March to one of its lowest levels in nearly 50 years. East talked with Kimberly Adams, host of our podcast “Make Me Smart,” about the other unexpected consequences of restrictive immigration policies.
HEAR MORE
Take the Marketplace news quiz!
Listen to “Marketplace,” test your knowledge, brag to your friends.
LET'S GO
Closeup of two golden brown rotisserie chickens on a spit.
Fred Tanneau/AFP via Getty Images
Final note
Nothing says bipartisanship like rotisserie chicken
Hot prepared foods have long been excluded from food stamp programs to promote home cooking. The bipartisan Rotisserie Chicken Act, introduced this week, would change that — albeit too late for the families who lost benefits to new work requirements this year.

Republican Sen. Jim Justice of West Virginia, one of the bill’s co-sponsors, said the popular grocery store loss leader is a low-cost source of protein that families can enjoy without turning on the oven. Co-sponsor Sen. John Fetterman, Democrat of Pennsylvania, said he’s partial to Costco’s $4.99 bird.
 
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