Thursday, February 19, 2026

Jobless Claims Near 5-Year Lows; Trade Deficit Widens Despite Tariffs; Ebay, Deere, Walmart Lead Earnings Parade as Futures Slip on Iran Fears

Wednesday was another one of those magical melt-up days on Wall Street that everybody has become so very used to witnessing, it's almost a crying shame if stocks don't go up for any particular reason. All indices started the session in the red, quickly popped to the positive and managed to hold onto about half of the session's gains.

These simplistic algorithmic gains don't hide the facts of a stumbling U.S. economy based mostly on shoddy, continually-revised--lower government data, like Non-farm Payrolls, CPI and GDP, the latter of which we'll get an advance look at tomorrow morning.

For today, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis announced that the U.S. trade balance (goods and services deficit) was $70.3 billion in December, up $17.3 billion from $53.0 billion in November, revised. The U.S. continues to insist on importing more than it exports. This is not surprising at all, even despite Trump's tariffs. For 2025, the goods and services deficit decreased $2.1 billion, or 0.2 percent, from 2024. Yep, those tariffs have made a huge impact.

Americans have been running trade deficits for the past 30 years, with no end in sight. Tariffs only make imports more expensive. USA-USA-USA! Hell, yeah!

Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing rose to 16.3 in February, up from 12.6 a month ago.

Initial Jobless Claims came in at 209,000, down sharply from last week's estimate of 229K, and close to the lowest in five years. Despite AI causing significant workforce reductions, the number is not at all surprising, given that there are fewer U.S. jobs to being with, ergo, fewer people to let go.

After the close on Wednesday, a few more companies reported 4th quarter results.

eBay (EBAY) - strong quarter, stock up 6% pre-market
Doordash (DASH) - missed estimates, shares up 9% (go fig
ure) Kinross (KGC) - strong beat, top and bottom, stock flat (go figure
again!) Carvana (CVNA) - unimpressive 4Q, clouded guidance, stock down 7%

Thursday, before the bell, more reports:
First Magestic (AG) - earnings, revenue beat, dividend boost, up 3%
John Deere (DE) - solid guidance, shares up 6%
Walmart (WMT) - stable earnings, cautious guidance; stock up 1.5%
Wayfair (W) - sales pop, narrows loss, up 12%
Yeti (YETI) - earnings in line, tariff issues send stock down 7%

Stock futures are sliding on fears of U.S. attack on Iron over weekend; oil futures up for same reason. Gold continues to test $5,000. Silver advanced overnight to as high as $78.60.

General conditions are still quite shaky

At the Close, Wednesday, February 18, 2026:
Dow: 49,662.66, +129.47 (+0.26%)
NASDAQ: 22,753.63, +175.25 (+0.78%)
S&P 500: 6,881.31, +38.09 (+0.56%)
NYSE Composite: 23,387.49, +86.71 (+0.37%)



Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Fiverr, Another AI Casualty, Drops 23% After Earnings Report; AI Is a Rolling Juggernaut of Labor Destruction and Repositioning

AI adoption is already taking its toll in a variety of areas, the latest casualty being the gig economy freelance marketplace, fiverr, a site at which companies and/or individuals can hire out talent for a wide variety of tasks, from mowing lawns to babysitting to website development, graphics, and coding.

The company (FVRR) released its latest quarterly earnings report Wednesday morning. While able to surpass analyst estimates, the company issued a discouraging forecast, citing AI as one of the main causes for caution moving forward.

Micha Kaufman, the company’s founder and CEO, emphasized that the company is experiencing a major shift in AI adoption, with the marketplace evolving to make human talent more essential.

The above quote, taken from this Benzinga article which outlines the company's financial condition, doesn't make a load of sense. CEO Kaufman recognizes the shift toward AI, but in the same breath offers the opinion that his company will focus on making "human talent more essential," which is the exact opposite of what AI does. It degrades human talent. In some cases - and these will grow as AI becomes more robust - AI eliminates human interaction altogether.

Now, if all you need is somebody to do window washing or lawn care, fiverr is probably a good place to look. But, if you're a business manager seeking to expand opportunities, increase market share, create content, do sales analysis, or any of the hundreds of business activities that constitute day-to-day operations, AI can do them at a fracton of the cost of what these freelancers on fiverr are charging, many of them already pitching AI tools and integration themselves.

Taken through a lens that filters out the burgeoning impact of AI, Fiverr's metrics weren't all that bad.

Fiverr reported adjusted earnings per share of 86 cents, beating the analyst consensus estimate of 72 cents. Normally, that would be positive. However, given the current climate, with the view that AI is going to eliminate much of the business need for human interaction, it's a bummer.

Shares are down some 22-24% in pre-market trading. What's worse is that the compnay's stock is down some 97% from where it was five years ago. Pre-market quote for FVRR is $10.33, down from an all-time high of $323 in February, 2021. Ouch!

That's where the rubber meets the road. Most savvy business managers want to keep costs down, while having the ability to delegate tasks and keep the managers time open to pursue more important activities, like smoozing with upper management, playing golf, or actually improving the business. Such a manager might hire a fiverr freelancer for a specific task, and, if professionally performed, might keep the freelancer on call for other jobs. Meanwhile, this manager is firing all of his full-time employees as he finds free-lance replacements.

On an tangetial level, Ai is going to wreak havoc on accounting, reporting, and employment firms, especially ones like Paychex (PAYX) which handles all the government filings and payroll for many small and medium-sized companies. Another area of impact will be in HR departments. With the need for personnal management degraded, there will eventually be no need to have much more than a single person overseeing the human workforce. The days of nagging HR compliance overseers are soon to meet their just reward: the unemployment line.

The fivrr experience is far from an isolated case. AI is going to rupture corporate myths and the need for human labor. AI, and the emergence of robotics in the workplace will make human interaction almost an afterthought. This ongoing, dramtic change in the business landscape is certain to have long-lasting effects. The companies which embrace AI and robotics at the fastest pace are most likely to aviod becoming irrelevant, but many will fall by the wayside simply by not keeping up with rapidchanges in corporate structure. Forget the horrors of DEI. The blue-haired tattooed lowlife demanding a living wage will become a forgotten relic from an era of massive stupidity.

Wise investors will be looking to firms which adopt AI in crafty ways and send their legacy employees - at least at entry level for now - packing.

At the close, Tuesday, February 17, 2026:
Dow: 49,533.19, +32.26 (+0.07%)
NASDAQ: 22,578.38, +31.71 (+0.14%)
S&P 500: 6,843.22, +7.05 (+0.10%)
NYSE Composite: 23,300.78, -25.31 (-0.11%)



Sunday, February 15, 2026

WEEKEND WRAP: AI Begins to Ravage Industries; Major Changes Afoot; Middle East Quiet, Though Tensions Remain; Oil Drops, Gas Rises

Fearless Rick reporting, in person...

AI is improving rapidly, and this week it impacted various industries, the most impacted being insurance, finance, law, real estate, and software. Financial firms got th most attention. Schwab and Raymond James finished the week 7.4% and 8.7% lower, respectively. Stifel Financial dipped 3.8%. Morgan Stanley (parent co. of eTrade) lost 2.4%.

AI is disrupting just about everything. Soon enough, AI tools will make copyright and trademark laws essentially irrelevant. A service from Bytedance (parent of TikTok), called Seedance 2.0 promises users to...

"Experience true multi-modal AI video creation. Combine images, videos, audio, and text to generate cinematic content with precise reference capabilities, seamless video extension, and natural language control."

For reference, recall that, due to U.S. national security concerns, TikTok’s American operations were restructured into a separate entity called TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC, which officially launched on January 22, 2026. Under this structure, Oracle, Silver Lake, and MGX each hold a 15% stake, collectively controlling 45% of the U.S. business. ByteDance retains a 19.9% stake, complying with U.S. law limiting Chinese ownership. The remaining 35.1% is held by other investors, including Michael Dell and Vastmere Strategic Investments.

Just as TikTok created a content firestorm, Seedance will eviscerate existing contracts with copyright holders, actors, producers, directors, TV and film studios because the software is inexpensive, available to anybody, works on any home computer and can generate images and video in a fraction of the time it takes traditional media. The backlash is likely to come in the form of more censorship by vested interests with close contact to internet infrastructure (Google, Amazon, Meta).

To show how rapidly AI is changing the landscape for content providers, here's the prompt I directed at Microsoft's 100% free Co-pilot AI this morning:

I would like a review of the past week in the financial world, including quotes for the major averages, which stocks were up, which were down, and a few paragraphs each devoted to the oil/gas industry, gas prices in the U.S., bitcoin and crypto, precious metals, and fixed income and treasuries. A summary of general market conditions and a look at the week ahead.

Here's what it returned, formatted for cut-and-paste application. It took less than 15 minutes start to finish, mostly because the human interaction (me) slowed the process. Actual computational time was less than two minutes.

Weekly snapshot — major averages (close of week)

  • S&P 500: 6,836.17
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average: 49,500.93
  • Nasdaq Composite: ~22,546–22,547

Who moved

Notable winners

Examples: Rivian; Coinbase; Fastly; Magna; several small‑cap and energy names posted strong weekly gains.

Notable losers

Examples: Pinterest; DraftKings; Bright Horizons; a number of speculative small caps and episodic weakness in some tech names tied to AI re‑rating.


Oil and gas industry

The oil and gas sector finished the week with mixed signals. Brent traded in the high‑$60s per barrel while WTI sat in the low‑$60s, with prices drifting on a mix of demand concerns and regional supply flows. Producers are balancing higher service costs and capital discipline against still‑solid cash flows. Mergers, production plans, and capital allocation decisions remain sensitive to short‑term price swings and OPEC+ signals. Market commentary this week emphasized inventory data and refinery throughput as the next near‑term drivers for crude.


U.S. gasoline prices

Retail gasoline moved only modestly week‑over‑week. National averages were roughly $2.90–$2.94 per gallon, with regional spreads (the West Coast notably higher) and small weekly upticks in some PADDs. Weekly fuel updates highlighted regional refinery maintenance and seasonal patterns as the main causes of local moves. Expect volatility around refinery turnarounds and any sudden crude swings.


Bitcoin and crypto

Bitcoin regained ground after mid‑week volatility, trading in the low $70k area by the weekend and showing a choppy but constructive weekly pattern. Crypto markets remained sensitive to macro headlines, regulatory chatter, and liquidity into spot and derivatives venues. Trading volumes and on‑chain metrics showed renewed activity, but not yet a broad risk‑on stampede; flows into ETFs and derivatives funding rates were notable drivers of intraday moves.


Precious metals

Gold rallied during the week, hitting weekly highs on a combination of softer inflation signals and risk‑off flows into safe havens. Silver and other precious metals followed, with traders citing the interplay between real yields and dollar moves as the dominant technical driver. Bullion market data showed a clear weekly uptick in prices and demand for hedging exposure.


Fixed income and Treasuries

Yields moved lower overall on softer inflation cues and some weaker economic prints, though the week included spikes tied to stronger‑than‑expected payrolls earlier in the period that briefly pushed yields higher. The 10‑year Treasury traded with intra‑week swings and closed the week reflecting continued uncertainty about the timing and pace of Fed easing. Duration and credit spreads tightened in pockets as investors rebalanced between risk and safety.


General market conditions

Macro data and Fed expectations: Mixed economic prints kept markets oscillating between risk‑on and risk‑off. Stronger payrolls earlier in the week briefly lifted yields and pressured growth and tech names, while softer inflation readings later eased rate‑cut timing bets.

Sector rotation and AI headlines: Debate over the breadth of the AI trade produced sharp moves in software, semiconductors, and adjacent sectors as analysts re‑priced winners and potential losers.

Commodities and FX: Moves in oil and metals fed through to energy and materials stocks; the dollar’s direction amplified moves in gold and crypto.


The week ahead

  1. Economic calendar: Watch remaining monthly data such as retail sales and industrial production, plus the next inflation and labor releases — these will steer Fed‑cut expectations and Treasury yields.
  2. Earnings and guidance: Corporate reports and management commentary, especially from large tech and AI‑exposed firms, can re‑ignite sector rotations.
  3. Energy and refinery updates: Unexpected outages or inventory surprises could move crude and gasoline prices and ripple into energy equities.
  4. Crypto flows and regulatory headlines: Monitor ETF flows, derivatives funding rates, and any regulatory announcements that could change liquidity or institutional appetite.

OK, it's far from perfect, but, complete output in a fraction of the time for human production, and that's using a free service. The paid services are much more robust, faster, think deeper, and, with training, produce more robust and useful information.

The essay, Something Big Is Happening, published by Matt Shumer on February 9, caught a lot of people's attention, as did Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman statement that most professional white-collar tasks could be fully automated within the next two years, outlining a timeline that would affect workers across industries, including law, accounting, and marketing.

"I think that we're going to have a human-level performance on most, if not all, professional tasks,” he said. “So white collar work, where you're sitting down at a computer, either being a lawyer or an accountant or a project manager or a marketing person, most of those tasks will be fully automated by an AI within the next 12 to 18 months.”

Having just toyed with AI the past six months or so, I can definitely see what the experts are warning about. As with any new technology, from the automobile, the cotton gin, telephone, or personal computers, there is going to be an adjustment period in affected industries where people lose jobs while other, more creative or resourceful types move up the corporate ladder, companies fail while others thrive and whole sectors are affected.

AI, being massively disruptive in its ability to mirror or even replace human interaction, is, at least, a productivity-enhancing tool. It performs tasks faster than humans can, and, with each improved iteration, it performs those tasks better and with more accuracy. This technology will replace jobs, or, for companies which recognize talent and wish to retain the best, will foment a radical shift in employment and wages. Top performers who can master AI at high levels will be rewarded with huge pay increases or reduced work time. The best human AI manipulators can work remotely or in office, at a relaxed pace, and outperform the 9-to-5 desk jockeys by degrees of magnitude.

Some will be rewarded. Others will become manual laborers, baristas, or fall into extended unemployment. No matter what happens, the disruptions in labor and productivity are going to be profound and long-lasting. AI is not a one-off technology. It has already improved by leaps and bounds, and, if Moore's Law holds sway, the predictions of Matt Shumer and Mustafa Suleyman might actually be on the conservative side of the argument.

AI could, and probably will, advance in proficiency and reliability at an amazingly rapid pace. Anybody who uses a computer for work should right now be brainstorming - with or without the assistance of AI - how to survive the coming upheaval. Finances, lifestyles, and even basic survival skills must be examined to fit into the evolving new world that's being presented by this intrusive, game-changing technology that prioritizes information over human interaction.

The future is going to be magnificent and horrifying at the same time. I'll be presenting more information in the March 2026 feature article on idleguy.com in two weeks.

For now, let's just say, you've been alerted.

Stocks

The NASDAQ suffered its fifth straight weekly loss. The Dow and S&P lost ground for the fourth time n the past five. Clearly, there's been institutional distribution and retail dip-buying at huge scale. Trading volume is roughly double what it was a year ago, and much of that has been on the downside of all-time highs. A suggestion that stocks may have been a bit overcooked could turn out to be the understatement of the year. Valuations are stretched to perfection while companies in a swath of sectors - from consumer discretionary to information technology - are under assault from AI and plain old profit-taking.

A near-term correction would seem likely. The NASDAQ is already down 5.4% from its October 29, 2025 high (23,958.47). Obviously, it has plenty of room to fall.

Markets are closed Monday for Presidents’ Day, but the week ahead offers a raft of economic data, some delayed still by the October government shutdown, starting with Empire State manufacturing (February) on Tuesday. Wednesday's drops include November and December Housing Starts, December Durable-goods Orders, January Federal Reserve FOMC minutes. On Thursday, the U.S. trade balance for December is reported, along with Initial jobless Claims, Retail and Wholesale inventories (December), February Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing and January's Pending Home Sales.

Inflation comes into focus on Friday with the December Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index. Also, the first reading of 4th quarer Gross Domestic Product (GDP), S&P flash Purchasing Manager Index, December New Home Sales and Consumer Sentiment from the University of Michigan.

The week ahead will also feature more earnings reports with Walmart, the only Dow component, reporting Thursday morning:

Monday: President's Day (stock and bond markets closed)

Tuesday: (before open) Vulcan Materials (VMC), Medtronic (MDT), ; (after close) Hecla Mining (HL), Palo Alto Networks (PANW), Devon Energy (DVN), Toll Brothers (TOL)

Wednesday: (before open) Bausch & Lomb (BLCO), fiverr (FVRR), Analog Devices (ADI), Garmin (GRMN); (after close) eBay (EBAY), Doordash (DASH), Equinox Gold (EQX), Kinross (KGC), Carvana (CVNA), PanAmerican Silver (PAAS)

Thursday: (before open) First Magestic (AG), John Deere (DE), Walmart (WMT), Klarna (KLAR), Wayfair (W), Yeti (YETI); (after close) Newmont Mining (NEM), Akamai (AKAM), Live Nation (LYV), Texas Roadhouse (TXRH), Opendoor (OPEN), Transocean (RIG)

Friday: (before open) Western Union (WU), Lamar (LAMR), Telix (TLX), Anglo Gold Ashanti (AU)

Treasury Yield Curve Rates

Date 1 Mo 1.5 mo 2 Mo 3 Mo 4 Mo 6 Mo 1 Yr
01/09/2026 3.70 3.68 3.63 3.62 3.62 3.57 3.52
01/16/2026 3.75 3.72 3.68 3.67 3.66 3.60 3.55
01/23/2026 3.78 3.71 3.72 3.70 3.67 3.61 3.53
01/30/2026 3.72 3.73 3.75 3.67 3.69 3.61 3.48
02/06/2026 3.72 3.72 3.74 3.68 3.70 3.59 3.45
02/13/2026 3.72 3.71 3.73 3.68 3.70 3.59 3.42

Date 2 Yr 3 Yr 5 Yr 7 Yr 10 Yr 20 Yr 30 Yr
01/09/2026 3.54 3.59 3.75 3.95 4.18 4.76 4.82
01/16/2026 3.59 3.67 3.82 4.02 4.24 4.79 4.83
01/23/2026 3.60 3.67 3.84 4.03 4.24 4.78 4.82
01/30/2026 3.52 3.60 3.79 4.01 4.26 4.82 4.87
02/06/2026 3.50 3.57 3.76 3.98 4.22 4.80 4.85
02/13/2026 3.40 3.43 3.61 3.81 4.04 4.64 4.69

This week's treasury yields reveal more about the stock market than anything else. A flight to the safety of fixed income is clearly underway, with yields of the 10-year note falling 18 basis points and the 30-year bond dipping 16, causing a squeeze in spreads from previously-stretched levels. 2s-10s fell to +64 from +72 last week and full spectrum dropped to +97 from +113.

Spreads and yields are evidence of financial stress which have only recently been prevalent. If anything, the stubbornness of short-dated maturities to budge from the high end of the federal funds target rate (3.50-3.75%) coupled with flattening of the curve suggests a rough path forward. There's no need to be reminded of the Fed's self-imposed entrapment, with inflation still on the mind and the economy straining for momentum. The AI-induced selloff in stocks is likely to continue in fits and starts, but could possibly expand more quickly than many traders assume, which would trigger long maturities even lower, flattening the curve and wiping out profitable spreads.

Nobody makes money in a flat-line situation and that certainly appears to be taking shape. The 10-year yield under 4.00% and the 30-year chasing it down isn't a very competitive structure, especially with foreign buyers on the run. With most analysis seeing the Fed stuck on hold until Kevin Warsh takes over from Jerome Powell in June, a sudden jerk lower in stocks might change some minds in a hurry. The next meeting (March 17-18) is still a month away, so the potential for an emergency cut may grow.

Thursday's big drop on the Dow might have been a sell signal at an institutional level.

Spreads:

2s-10s
2025
1/3: +32
1/10: +37
1/17: +34
1/24: +36
1/31: +36
2/7: +20
2/14: +21
2/21: +23
2/28: +25
3/7: +33
3/14: +29
3/21: +31
3/28: +38
4/4: +33
4/11: +52
4/17: +53
4/25: +55
5/2: +50
5/9: +49
5/16: +45
5/23: +51
5/30: +52
6/6: +48
6/13: +45
6/20: +48
6/27: +56
7/3: +47
7/11: +53
7/18: +56
7/25: +49
8/1: +54
8/8: +51
8/15: +58
8/22: +58
8/29: +64
9/5: +59
9/12: +50
9/19: +57
9/26: +57
10/3: +45
10/10: +53
10/17: +56
10/24: +54
10/31: +51
11/7: +56
11/14: +52
11/21: +55
11/28: +55
12/5: +58
12/12: +67
12/19: +68
12/26: +68
2026
1/2: +72
1/9: +64
1/16: +65
1/23: +64
1/30: +74
2/6: +72
2/13: +64

Full Spectrum (30-days - 30-years)
2025
1/3: +38
1/10: +54
1/17: +41
1/24: +40
1/31: +36
2/7: +32
2/14: +32
2/21: +31
2/28: +13
3/7: +24
3/14: +25
3/21: +23
3/28: +26
4/4: +5
4/11: +38
4/17: +44
4/25: +40
5/2: +41
5/9: +46
5/16: +52
5/23: +68
5/30: +59
6/6: +69
6/13: +67
6/20: +69
6/27: +66
7/3: +51
7/11: +59
7/18: +65
7/25: +55
8/1: +32
8/8: +37
8/15: +44
8/22: +41
8/29: +51
9/5: +49
9/12: +40
9/19: +54
9/26: +55
10/3: +47
10/10: +43
10/17: +42
10/24: +48
10/31: +61
11/7: +69
11/14: +70
11/21: +68
11/28: +62
12/5: +97
12/12: +109
12/19: +111
12/26: +111
2026
1/2: +114
1/9: +112
1/16: +108
1/23: +104
1/30: +115
2/6: +113
2/13" +97

Oil/Gas

WTI crude closed out the week at $60.58, easing back from last week's finish at $63.50 on some slight easing of tensions in the Middle East. Somebody knows something following Israel's Netanyahu visit to D.C., as President Trump's remarks and tweets suggest that negotiations are still possible, though "all options" (war) remain on the table. The U.S. military command realizes that any kinetic action against Iran will likely result in a protracted conflict, which is maybe what the meeting between Trump, Bibi, and a host of civilians, with no military input, portends.

The markets prefer the dovish path defined by Trump, though the reality is probably quite different and much more messy.

The U.S. national average for gas at the pump rose another three cents, to $2.92 by Sunday.

California ramped up another 12 cents this week, to $4.55 per gallon, the highest in the nation and up 24 cents in just the past two weeks. Washington ($4.12) popped back into the $4+ club. Oregon ($3.61), was up 12 cents. After three weeks under $3.00, Arizona is above $3.00 for second straight week, at $3.15. The lowest prices remain in the Southeast, with Oklahoma well below any other state, at $2.25, followed by Louisiana ($2.40), Arkansas and Mississippi ($2.43). The remaining Southeast states, from North Carolina ($2.69) west to New Mexico, are all below $2.70, except Florida ($2.87).

In the Northeast, prices remained steady and consistently close to recent lows. Only Pennsylvania ($3.11) was above $3.00. New York held steady at $2.97, along with Vermont ($2.99).

In the midwest region, where the price relief has been significant, Illinois remained the highest, holding at $3.00, up ten cents from two weeks past, with Michigan closer, at $2.98. Kansas was the lowest ($2.46), followed by North Dakota and Iowa ($2.47).

Sub-$3.00 gas was the norm in 41 of the lower 48 states, the same as last week, leaving only California, Washington, Nevada, Oregon, Illinois, Arizona, and Pennsylvania, at $3.00 or above.

Bitcoin

This week: $68,948.18
Last week: $71,145.72
2 weeks ago: $77,242.74
6 months ago: $117,555.50
One year ago: $97,544.53
Five years ago: $55,936.80

With overall liquidity becoming more and more an issue, bitcoin is feeling the pain, nearing a loss of 50% over the past six months. At current levels, anybody who bought into bitcoin in the past 15 months (November 2024) is holding at a loss or, more likely, has already moved on to other pursuits.

It's not going to get any better for bitcoiners or others invested in crypto, it being speculative in the extreme.

Precious Metals

Gold:Silver Ratio: 65.32; last week: 63.66

Futures, per COMEX continuous contracts:

Gold price 1/16: $4,601.10
Gold price 1/23: $4,983.10
Gold price 1/30: $4,907.50
Gold price 2/6: $4,988.60
Gold price 2/13: $5,063.80

Silver price 1/16: $89.94
Silver price 1/23: $103.26
Silver price 1/30: $85.25
Silver price 2/6: $77.53
Silver price 2/13: $77.27

SPOT:
(stockcharts.com)
Gold 1/16: $4,595.42
Gold 1/23: $4,989.23
Gold 1/30: $4,886.71
Gold 2/6: $4,964.07
Gold 2/13: $5,041.72

Silver 1/16: $89.94
Silver 1/23: $102.95
Silver 1/30: $84.63
Silver 2/6: $77.98
Silver 2/13: $77.19

Silver got whacked again on Thursday, February 12, dropping it from bids around $83 down to $75. Gold was also clubbed to a lesser extent, rallying on Friday to hold above $5,000.

It's Lunar (Chinese) New Year, so the SGE and SHFE, along with all Chinese stock exchanges are closed until Monday, February 23rd. It will be interesting to watch what the COMEX and LBMA riggers do with gold, and especially, silver pricing with the physical market in China shut down. Of course, there's still trading in Mumbai, Singapore, Dubai, and elsewhere with which to contend, so the week ahead may offer some insight to just how well-positioned Western traders are compared to their Asian counterparts.

Sit back and enjoy the show.

Here are the most recent prices for common one ounce gold and silver items sold on eBay (free shipping included, numismatics excluded):

Item/Price Low High Average Median
1 oz silver coin: 85.00 110.00 95.74 94.00
1 oz silver bar: 84.00 110.00 96.41 94.79
1 oz gold coin: 5,050.00 5,563.19 5,419.49 5,418.28
1 oz gold bar: 5,069.00 5,419.38 5,332.83 5,357.51

The Single Ounce Silver Market Price Benchmark (SOSMPB) took another drop this week, falling to $95.24, a decline of $2.27 from the February 8 price of $97.51 per troy ounce. The weekly movement reflects wider volatility in world markets and between physical and paper prices.

The weekly eBay price survey revealed that retail dealers and casual buyers and sellers are adjusting to severe premiums, likely the latter in terms of dealers, most of which don't have the cash resources to hedge against the recent wild swings. Supposedly, coin shops have been inundated with gold and silver sellers, hocking, according to Bloomberg (which means it's likely fake news) all of grandma's silverware. Most anybody who is selling their bullion or coinage does not appreciate the dynamics of the market and the positions of the small dealers. Premiums at dealers and on ebay are 20-25% for small denominations, so the small stackers are apparently confident that the recent smackdowns are temporary, which is also the opinion of most serious silver analysts.

WEEKEND WRAP

Change is usually good, and, presently, probably necessary. Old hacks need to be retired. Many are no longer useful nor desired.

At the Close, Friday, February 13, 2026:
Dow: 49,500.93, +48.95 (+0.10%)
NASDAQ: 22,546.67, -50.48 (-0.22%)
S&P 500: 6,836.17, +3.41 (+0.05%)
NYSE Composite: 23,326.09, +137.27 (+0.59%)

For the Week:
Dow: -614.74 (-1.23%)
NASDAQ: -484.54 (-2.10%)
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Friday, February 13, 2026

Stocks, Silver Got Rocked Lower Thursday; Friday the 13th Setting Up for Volatile Session; January CPI Reported at 2.4% Annually

Thursday morning, Money Daily noted that trading in stocks was sluggish and that the major indices were becoming very tempting to short.

It didn't take long for markets to confirm the timeliness of the observation. All three majors jumped higher out of the gate, but quickly reversed course, the NASDAQ needing just 15 minutes to dip into the red, where it remained the rest of the day. The Dow and S&P followed suit, as the indices got back to the kind of volatility that had been typical for most of the year thus far.

The financial press trotted out the usual suspects for the declines: fears of AI disruption to labor markets and geo-political conditions. What they failed to mention were the number of companies producing fourth quarter 2025 numbers that were disappointing or questionably negative 2026 forecasts. This earnings season has been one of the most challenging in years, companies in nearly all sectors outside of tech and large-cap industrials have been beset by underlying forces of tariffs, supply chain concerns, and lack of pricing power in the face of stretched consumer budgets.

Factset reported last week that with 59% of all S&P 500 companies reporting, 76% have reported actual EPS above estimates, which is below the 5-year average of 78%. The report also shows that all sectors other than information technology and communications services are showing single digit revenue growth. The report fails to account for the number of companies issuing unfavorable guidance or EPS and/or revenue that failed to beat prior quarter or year-ago results, of which there are many.

While Wall Street hustlers continue to herd the public into a false sense of security, insiders and executives have been taking profits, selling off their own shares while having the company buy back shares, effectively boosting EPS by lowering the number of shares outstanding. It's a trick Wall Street has been employing for the past two decades, hiding the fat that many of the high-flying stocks have gotten rich not by expanding their businesses or investing in CapEx or research, but by limiting the number of shares available to the public, which has pushed individual stocks and the general indices to record highs over and over again.

Thursday's rout now on the back-burner of some very short memories, the BLS released January CPI Friday morning, delivering a much-needed dose of disinflationary information. Month-over-month, CPI increased only 0.2% and 2.4% on an annual basis, down from 2.7% in December. This should come as welcome news to the crowd favoring rate cuts, as they can now claim inflation is close enough to the Fed's 2.0% target that inflation concerns can be put aside, making way for further cuts to the federal funds target rate to boost the economy.

Arguing for rate cuts as a way to improve economic conditions is close to, but not entirely, an admission the the U.S. economy is not 100% or the "hottest" on the planet, according to President Trump. Consumers are strapped and need relief in the form of lower prices, though what's addressed in the CPI fails to include much of the hidden costs of 21st century living, like property taxes, insurance, and health care, all of which have been skyrocketing of late.

Like clockwork, stock futures ripped higher on the CPI announcement, though the move only served to take futures out of the red and briefly into positive territory, a very unconvincing bump. about 45 minutes prior to the opening bell, Dow futures stood at -19; NASDAQ futures, -19; S&P futures, -7.

Silver was punished for being a valuable asset on the COMEX, Thursday with the price of an ounce down more than 10%, "selling" for as low as $73.86. Not coincidentally, Chinese New Year is underway, with the Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE) and Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) closed from February 13 to the 20th. Anybody considering stocking some precious metals might find this an opportune time to do so, as prices for physical are nowhere near the paper prices pumped by the COMEX and LBMA riggers. Good luck finding shiny close to spot prices. Dealers are reporting shortages and long lead times. The U.S. mint isn't selling any silver one-ounce coins for less than $169, which is more than double the spot price. Yes, that is odd.

For the week, through Thursday's close, the Dow is down 663 points, the NASDAQ is off 434, and the S&P is down 99.

Stocks reporting Thursday after the close included:

  • Pinterest (PINS) - revenue miss, weak guidance, shares down 22% pre-market
  • Coinbase (COIN) - net loss, 20% lower revenue, shares up 7%
  • DraftKings (DKNG) - forecast short of estimates, stock down 15%
  • Applied Materials (AMAT) - upbeat outlook, demand from AI, shares up 10%
  • Expedia (EXPE) - earnings beat, shares down 5%
  • Dutch Bros. (BROS) - strong quarter, expansion plans boost shares 15%

Friday, before the open:

  • Wendy's (WEN) - slaes down, stock down 4%
  • Advance Auto Parts (AAP) - sales growth, positive forecast, shares up 10%
  • Moderna (MRNA) - narrows loss, reiterates growth target, sheas higher by 4%

Bombing Iran shortly after the close a distinct possibility.

At the Close, Thursday, February 12, 2026:
Dow: 49,451.98, -669.42 (-1.34%)
NASDAQ: 22,597.15, -469.32 (-2.03%)
S&P 500: 6,832.76, -108.71 (-1.57%)
NYSE Composite: 23,188.82, -290.90 (-1.24%)



Thursday, February 12, 2026

Stocks Continue Sluggish Trade, Seeking Catalyst; Cisco, AppLovin Report, Both Down 7%; Bombing Iran this Weekend?

It's been said, "never short a dull market," but this one is tempting.

Moribund trading persisted for the third straight session Wednesday. Not even the magical appearance of Bibi Netanyahu (sans the obligatory speech to congress and raucous applause) could send the averages higher... or lower. There was nothing about which to be excited, as earnings reports continued to suggest weakness in many diverse categories. Ford stumbled. Lyft didn't get off the ground. KraftHeinz, after combining two iconic American brands doesn't know if it should separate them again. Humana loses money, and Mattell, well, nobody is buying toys because there aren't any kids.

The BLS January jobs report of 130,000 new jobs didn't inspire confidence. Rather, more snickering at the obvious failure of another government agency. While the January jobs number was less-than-believable, the annual revision, slashing 862,000 seasonally-adjusted jobs from the 2025 tally, demonstrated the folly of trusting any government numbers, at any time. They're always subject to revision, and always seem to be lower than originally reported.

Thus, the forces arguing for lower interest rates, which includes the president, every one of his cabinet members (via their oath of loyalty), and every empty suit on Wall Street, have more ammunition backing their argument. No jobs! We must hav lower interest rates to goose the economy! Don't worry about inflation.

That's where their argument ends. Inflation is here to stay. Lower interest rates will only make it worse. But, they're hell-bent on their quest because of midterms, political control, and other mindless matters that masquerade as governance in Washington, D.C.

More companies reported fourth quarter earnings after the bell on Wednesday:

  • Cisco (CSCO) - beat top and bottom, forecast left doubts, shares down 7% pre-open
  • Applovin (APP) - speculator's darling, drops 7% pre-market
  • Aurora (AUR) - continues series of losses, misses top line, shares flat

Thursday, before the open saw a few more:

  • CROCS (CROX) - US sales down, foreign sales up, stock up 15%
  • Birkenstock (BIRK) - revenue miss, shares flat

Not much to get the animal spirits moving there.

After the close Thursday, a few with a little more heft will offer their reports: Pinterest (PINS), Rivian (RVN), Coinbase (COIN), DraftKings (DKNG), Applied Materials (AMAT), Expedia (EXPE), Dutch Bros. (BROS).

Bitcoin continued to fall, dropping below $67,000 early this morning. Gold is under pressure Thursday morning, down around $5 to $5,078, holding key level. Silver continues to search for direction, trading lower Thursday morning, at $82.93, also holding at recent consolidation levels.

Futures, of course are higher. Dow: +171; NASDAQ: +118; S&P: +28.

Initial jobless claims came in at 227,000 for the most recent week, helping futures move higher, though the unemployment claims numbers are as squirrelly as the BLS NFP.

Looks like another day for drifting along until the U.S. lobs bombs at Iran, an inevitability, and tomorrow is Friday the 13th, the Super Bowl is over, and March Madness isn't for another month. Gotta have some entertainment.

At the Close, Wednesday, February 12, 2026:
Dow: 50,121.40, -66.70 (-0.13%)
NASDAQ: 23,066.47, -36.03 (-0.16%)
S&P 500: 6,941.47, -0.34 (-0.00%)
NYSE Composite: 23,479.72, +81.62 (+0.35%)