● Speed: How It Explains the World
Vaclav Smil
Review via The Wall Street Journal
We are often told that the speed of innovation today is faster than ever before and accelerating exponentially. But as we prod and marvel at our smartphones or develop parasocial relationships with our chatbots, it’s useful to remember that a few decades spanning the turn of the 20th century saw the invention of lightbulbs, the electric automobile, home refrigeration and powered flight. How fast are we really going now by comparison? And is faster necessarily better?
That is the question posed in “Speed,” a marvelously encyclopedic book by Vaclav Smil, an environmental scientist and professor emeritus at the University of Manitoba.
US Q2 GDP Growth Expected Near Q1’s Increase
Economic activity is on track to expand close to the pace reported in the first quarter, based on the latest Q2 nowcasts compiled by The Capital Spectator. The median estimate suggests growth will ease slightly from Q1.
Cooler June Inflation Clashes with Fresh Middle East Risk
Federal Reserve officials are talking tough on inflation, but the outlook for monetary policy is still cloudy amid murky geopolitical and economic conditions.
June’s Drop in the Yield Premium Faces a Gulf‑Driven Reality Check
The market premium for the U.S. 10‑year Treasury yield dipped in June after rising for three months, based on a fair‑value estimate calculated by The Capital Spectator. The decline coincided with last month’s expectations that the war‑driven rise in inflation expectations had peaked. But the resumption of hostilities in the Gulf in recent days has raised questions about whether recent optimism on the inflation outlook is premature.
The US Expansion Continues, but Its Foundations Are Uneven
The US expansion just marked its six‑year anniversary, and the odds still lean toward growth holding up in the near term. Yet the backdrop is anything but serene. Geopolitical flashpoints, economic crosscurrents, and a thicket of slow‑burn risks continue to accumulate beneath the surface.
Gulf’s Gray‑Zone Conflict Is Becoming a Market Stress Test
The Middle East conflict is a fire that seems to die down, only to flare up from embers that continue to burn. Those embers burned brighter over the weekend as the ongoing cycle of attacks between the US and Iran continued. The military strikes of the past week have had little effect on markets to date, but it’s an open question how a low‑grade war will affect investor sentiment if the fighting drags on for weeks or months.
Book Bits: 11 July 2026
● The Asset Class: How Private Equity Turned Capitalism Against Itself
Hettie O’Brien
Review via The Guardian
Private equity partnerships are groups of individual and institutional investors with deep pockets. O’Brien traces their rise following the era of deregulation inaugurated by Reagan and Thatcher, and details how Blackstone, the Qatar Investment Authority, Macquarie, KKR and others have bought undervalued assets using borrowed money to minimise their exposure to risk. What happens next is that costs, wages and investment in the future are frequently cut to the bone in the cause of exceptionally high returns.
Markets Grapple With Inflation Risk as Gulf Tensions Rise
War‑related inflation risk appeared to be easing when the US and Iran signed a ceasefire three weeks ago, but new military strikes in the Gulf region this week from both sides highlights and strengthens the uncertainty around the outlook. Markets aren’t yet fully persuaded that inflation will continue to rise, but events over the last several days have increased doubt about when pricing pressure will ease.
Iran Conflict Reorders the Bond Market’s Hierarchy of Havens
The Iran war has scrambled the old map of safety, leaving bond investors rethinking which havens still deserve the name. It’s debatable whether the period since the attacks began on Feb. 28 has forged a new normal, but a review of performance across major fixed‑income sectors certainly raises questions about how to manage expectations.
Geopolitical Risk Roars Back: Oil and Yields Lead the Repricing
The U.S.–Iran ceasefire was looking strained before it appeared to break after both sides traded military strikes yesterday. President Trump said on Wednesday that he believes the ceasefire and interim agreement to end the war are “over.” He added that while U.S. negotiators can continue talking with Iran, he personally considers the effort “a waste of time.”