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Website improvements

Hi all, A quick note to offer guidance on the new website. As well as the layout changes that make it easier to access content for new readers, it comes with a dramatically improved sign-up and resubscription process, greatly enhanced speed, and a much better mobile experience (since 95% of traffic is now phone!). The

Latest posts

9

And now for the inflation shock

Charts from TME. Nothing matters…for now Flows are in control, and nothing else seems to matter. Oil, volatility, macro — all getting ignored as mechanical buying keeps pushing markets higher. But under the surface, things are getting stretched, and the setup is becoming more fragile. This works
 until it doesn’t. Who cares about oil? The

6

Rate hike doubts as economic damage builds

ANZ leads us off. It argues that the damage to consumption from fuel price hikes is material. According to the most recent ABS data available (2019–20), families consume about 77% of automobile gasoline and 29% of automotive diesel, which combined account for about 53% of Australia’s total automotive petroleum use (by volume). In 2025, Australian

0

Iron ore rides high on the war

Chinese steel exports are down 10% in Q1. Early February, CISA steel output finally bounced a bit, but is still down 6.2% YTD. Inventories climbed as a result. China also recently lifted all BHP bans, likely due to the Iranian war, so we can expect accumulation to resume at Chinese ports soon. Official Chinese data

14

Trumpgod strikes down Australia

The Trumpgod is positive. President Donald Trump says the US and Iran could clinch a permanent ceasefire, with talks between Washington and Tehran possibly resuming this weekend. Trump claims Iran has agreed to terms including giving up ambitions for a nuclear weapon and turning over nuclear material, but Tehran has not publicly confirmed these concessions.

11

Canada fixed its rental crisis. Australia chose not to.

This week, the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) released data on net permanent & long-term (NPLT) arrivals, which remained at historically high levels in February 2026. In the year to February, 479,000 NPLT arrivals landed in Australia, a whisker below the all-time high level of 498,000 recorded two years prior in February 2024. The latest

66

Old farts burn through fuel like prune juice

According to the CBA HSI, Australian household spending rose strongly in March, increasing 2.9% after a February dip, largely driven by a sharp rise in fuel costs linked to Middle East tensions. Transport spending jumped 22.9%, accounting for over half the monthly increase, while overall spending still grew 1.0% excluding transport, with gains across all

0

MB Fund Podcast: Trump’s carbon tax

In this week’s podcast, we’re unpacking what some are calling “Trump’s carbon tax” — exploring how Donald Trump’s escalation with Iran is driving oil prices higher, why those energy shocks act like an implicit tax on consumers and businesses, and what this tightening energy backdrop means for markets, inflation, and investor positioning. Download presentation slides

29

No Chris Bowen, EVs won’t fix Australia’s fuel problem

Since the 1970s oil shocks, the International Energy Agency (IEA) has mandated that members maintain 90 days of net crude oil reserves. As explained by The AFR’s Phil Coorey, Australia’s stockpiles began to decline after Labor lost power in 2013. During the Coalition government’s tenure, four of Australia’s remaining six refineries shut down because they

4

Overbought and running out of fuel

Charts for TME. Now what? From squeeze to chase – now what? SPX is back at highs, but the character of the move is shifting. What began as forced buying is now turning into chasing, with vols firming and positioning getting crowded again. This is where things get more complicated. LSEG Workspace Terrific tech NASDAQ

12

Aussie inflation roars higher

We don’t get another official release of CPI data until the end of the month, but some private surveys are already ripping higher. The Melbourne Institute monthly gauge printed its highest ever monthly blowout of 1.3% Mom and 4.2% Yoy headline. The NAB survey was equally bad for input costs, though it looks like businesses

14

Energy crisis intensifies

Day two of God Trump’s Iran blockade, and it is the worst it has been. Bad-faith “negotiations” have, however, brought down dated Brent, as further negotiations may happen. This is particularly stark given news that the US will not renew either Iranian or Russian oil sanctions waivers by the end of this week, taking still

17

Net permanent & long-term arrivals remains historically high

The Albanese government continues to import people into Australia at a furious rate, with 96,110 net permanent and long-term (NPLT) arrivals in February, the third-strongest February result on record, behind 2025 (111,740) and 2024 (105,460). Over the year to February 2026, 478,910 NPLT arrivals landed in Australia, down from the all-time peaks of 498,270 recorded

16

WA establishes 2 hour strategic diesel reserve

Bloomie. Western Australia will establish its own strategic reserves of diesel fuel to ease “acute shortages,” the state’s government said. The government signed a deal with Cambridge Gulf Ltd. to buy and store 4 million liters of diesel, which is expected to arrive in the coming weeks, according to a statement. The inventory may be expanded to 12

4

The crash up to nowhere

TME with the charts. Complacency is back Panic gone. Volatility crushed. Complacency back. The flip SPX futures are nearing the 7k level, with range highs just above. Downside panic has flipped into upside chasing, while vols have reset to pre-war levels. Chart 2 (SPX vs. VIX, inverted) shows the gap has narrowed materially from peak

5

Unemployment climbs

Roy Morgan with the news. Overall Australian unemployment and under-employment at 3.4 million in March; ‘Real Unemployment’ at 1.69 million In March 2026, Australian ‘real’ unemployment dropped 28,000 to 1,693,000 (10.5% of the workforce, down 0.1%), and under-employment dropped 205,000 to 1,687,000 (down 1.2% to 10.4%). Given the data is not seasonally adjusted, the only