Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf on early Monday took a shot at the US, warning that energy pricing is increasingly being driven by sentiment rather than fundamentals, as tensions around the Strait of Hormuz continue to rattle global supply chains.Also read: Iran rejects second round of talks with US in Pakistan
In a post on X, Ghalibaf described “vibe-trading digital crude oil prices” as resembling “vibe-hedging in Treasuries during Hormuz risk-off”, arguing that both markets are built on fragile assumptions. “Both share one house of cards that works on paper,” he wrote. Drawing a contrast, he added: “Oil at least has Dated Brent. Treasuries? Vibes all the way down,” before referencing a Bloomberg Terminal command linked to benchmark crude pricing, “EUCRBRDT Index GP
Lebanon: ‘Offends our religious feelings’: Image of IDF soldier striking Jesus statue in Lebanon sparks outrage
Israel’s military has opened an investigation after a photograph circulated online appearing to show one of its soldiers striking a statue of Jesus Christ in southern Lebanon.The Israel Defense Forces…