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From Risk Premia to Constraint


The latest Middle East flare-up has once again put theoretical asset pricing at odds with how markets actually clear: prices can move violently even when long-run fundamentals have not obviously changed.

In calm regimes, the textbook framework, risk premia as compensation for bearing systematic risk, does a respectable job of organizing returns. But in stress, a different mechanism often dominates. Prices clear less as a referendum on fair value and more as a function of constraints: leverage, margining, liquidity, mandates, and who is forced to transact first.

In those moments, equilibrium is less about consensus and more about balance-sheet capacity.

For institutional investors and the investment professionals serving them, the implication is practical. A mispricing is only an opportunity if it can be held until it closes. The relevant horizon is not valuation, but funding and governance.

In practice, this shows up in a few consistent shifts:

  1. You stop treating volatility as a sufficient measure of risk.

Variance is a statistic. Investor pain is often driven by fragility — the interaction of leverage, liquidity, path dependency, and funding terms. In the gilt episode, the defining risk was not that yields moved, but that the move triggered collateral calls and forced sales in an illiquid market.

  1. You stop treating “cheap” as inherently actionable.

A mispricing is only an opportunity if you can survive the path to convergence. The relevant horizon is not valuation, but funding and governance. Capacity is not a “risk overlay”; it is part of the edge.

  1. You reinterpret cash and patience as optionality.

In a consensus-clearing world, holding cash can feel like an admission of analytical defeat. In a balance-sheet-clearing world, cash is an intentionally held option, it allows you to provide liquidity when others are forced to sell. The right question is not “why aren’t we fully invested?” but “are we paid for the fragility we are underwriting, and can we hold it when it bites?”

  1. You treat governance as a market variable.

Many institutions treat liquidity as an attribute of the asset. In practice, liquidity depends on who needs to trade at the same time and whether your decision-making can respond at the speed the regime demands. Governance latency is not a cultural issue; it is a risk parameter.

Rubber bullet carnage as 1,000 animal welfare activists storm beagle breeding lab in Wisconsin



About 1,000 animal welfare activists who tried to gain entry Saturday to a beagle breeding and research facility in Wisconsin were turned back by police who fired rubber bullets and pepper spray into the crowd and arrested the group’s leader.

It was the second attempt in as many months by protesters to take beagles from the Ridglan Farms facility in Blue Mounds, a small town about 25 miles (about 40 kilometers) southwest of the capital, Madison.

Dane County Sheriff Kalvin Barrett, said in a video statement that 300 to 400 protesters were “violently trying to break into the property” and assault officers. He said protesters have ignored designated areas for peaceful protest and blocked roads to prevent emergency vehicles from entering.

“This is not a peaceful protest,” Barrett said.

The sheriff’s department said a “significant” number of people were arrested out of about 1,000 protesters at the site but did not give an exact total as they were still being processed as of the afternoon.

Protesters tried to overcome barricades that included a manure-filled trench, hay bales and a barbed-wire fence. Some protesters did get through the fence but were unable to enter the facility, where an estimated 2,000 beagles are kept, the Wisconsin State Journal reported.

“I just feel defeated,” activist Julie Vrzeski told the newspaper about three hours into the operation after no dogs had been successfully seized.

Activists later moved from the Ridglan facility to protest outside the jail in downtown Madison.

The group Coalition to Save the Ridglan Dogs had publicized plans to seize the dogs Sunday but launched its operation a day earlier. The X account of the group’s leader, Wayne Hsiung, posted a picture of him being arrested.

The sheriff’s department said a person who “recklessly” drove a pickup through the front gate of the property was arrested, “preventing a potentially deadly outcome.”

Protesters broke into the facility in March and took 30 dogs. Twenty-seven people were arrested on trespassing and other charges.

Ridglan has denied mistreating animals but agreed in October to give up its state breeding license as of July 1 as part of a deal to avoid prosecution on animal mistreatment charges.

On its website it says “no credible evidence of animal abuse, cruelty, mistreatment or neglect at Ridglan Farms has ever been presented or substantiated.”

Here’s How Today’s Workers Offset the Rise of AI and Heavy Screen Time


Dean Drobot / Shutterstock.com

Technology continues to reshape the workplace, but many professionals are finding that balance, not a fully digital workplace, is the secret to doing their best work. The Analog at Work Pulse Report from FlexJobs, based on a survey of over 4,400 workers, explores how employees are navigating technology, AI, and traditional work habits as digital tools become more common across industries.

Citi Travel: $50 Off $300 Hotel Booking (Targeted)


Citi Travel: $50 Off $300 Hotel Booking

Citi is targeting select cardholders with an offer to save $50 on the next hotel booking through Citi Travel. This offer is showing up when you first log in to your Citi credit card account. Check out the details below.

Offer Details

Enjoy $50 off a one-time hotel stay of $300 or more, when booked through Citi Travel or 1 833 737 1288 (TTY: 711). Offer ends 5/14/2026. One-time use only. Terms apply.

Citi Travel: $50 Off $300 Hotel Booking

Important Terms

  • This $50 off $300 promotion is valid for one hotel booking made between 4/14/2026 to 5/14/2026 and is subject to the additional requirements stated below.
  • There is no minimum hotel nights requirement to receive the promotion.
  • To receive the $50 discount, you must pre-pay for your complete stay.
  • This offer is available only for the recipient of this banner, is non-transferable, and can only be used for the card you selected when you received this offer.
  • The $50 off a single hotel stay promotion will be automatically applied at the time of booking.
  • Reservations must be made by the primary cardmember but can be made for the benefit and in the name of either the primary cardmember or another person.
  • The $50 off a single hotel stay promotion will not be applied to any existing bookings made before 4/14/2026.
  • The $50 off hotel stay promotion will be applied to a single eligible hotel booking made between 4/14/2026 to 5/14/2026.

Guru’s Wrap-up

Nice discount for those who are targeted. You can stack it with the Citi Strata Elite $300 Annual Hotel Benefit.

Miami-Dade home sales rise yet again


Still, median existing condo prices in Miami-Dade reached $445,000 in March, up 291% since 2011, while single‑family medians rose to $674,000, almost triple their 2011 level.

Financing constraints remained acute. Just 0.9% of South Florida condo buildings were approved for FHA loans, compared with far looser conditions in most US metros, pushing many entry‑level borrowers toward private and non‑QM options.

Miami’s multifamily pipeline and Florida’s Live Local Act offered one of the few pressure valves in a tight market.

Southeast Florida led the nation for multifamily construction as of late 2025, with more than 36,000 units underway.

Updated Live Local provisions granted by‑right density to projects that reserved at least 40% of units for households earning up to 120% of area median income.

LAST Chance before Market Rallies? Investing 10 Lacs in this Crash!! – Rahul Jain



Market crash = opportunity?

Is this the last chance before the next rally?
If i were to deploy ₹10 Lakhs smartly and manage risk in volatile markets.

In this video, I’ve also broken down risk vs reward ratio with proper data so you can make informed decisions.

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1. Rahul Jain is registered with SEBI as Individual Research Analyst vide Registration number INH000023287 dated September 15, 2025 pursuant to which it provides Research Analyst services to its clients.
2. Any matter displayed in this content are purely for Knowledge purpose and shall not be treated as an advice or opinion of any kind. Neither Rahul Jain nor the marketing agents related to the firm shall be held liable/responsible in any manner whatsoever for any losses the viewers may incur due to acting upon this content.
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Exclusive: Your delivery robot will now offer the blind on-the-ground eyes around sidewalk hazards


The delivery robots rolling down your sidewalk have cameras, sensors, and a constant need to dodge whatever is in their path. Think fallen e-scooters, construction zones, and tricky curbs. That data gets stored so that other robots know what lies ahead of them—and it’s now going to the world’s most widely used GPS app for the blind so they can better navigate city streets.

Coco Robotics, the Los Angeles-based startup operating roughly 10,000 delivery bots across the United States and Europe, is partnering with BlindSquare to remit real-time sidewalk hazard data directly to visually impaired pedestrians. The partnership, announced today, will go live across all six of Coco’s operating markets: Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago, and Jersey City in the U.S. and Helsinki and Turku in Finland.

As Coco’s robots make food deliveries for local restaurants, they continuously log every obstacle they encounter. That data feeds into Coco’s sidewalk map, updated to the minute, and under the new partnership, it will also flow to BlindSquare. The self-voicing app converts the information into spoken alerts delivered in 26 languages, warning users roughly 10 meters before they reach a hazard. In effect, thousands of delivery robots become on-the-ground eyes for people who cannot see what’s ahead.

Issues like bad curb cuts and obstacles like tipped-over scooters have posed significant hazards for the blind.

Jonathan Wiggs/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

Boots on the ground, with wheels

The partnership grew out of a European Union grant funding Coco’s operations in Helsinki, where the city’s innovation arm, Forum Virium Helsinki, connected the two companies. Ilkka Pirttimaa, the Finnish developer who built BlindSquare 14 years ago and has watched it grow to roughly 90,000 downloads across 190 countries, was already part of the Helsinki grant consortium alongside Swarco, the traffic-signal manufacturer.

He told Fortune “I didn’t even know any blind persons” when he built BlindSquare. Instead, as someone who loved open data and looking at city maps, he followed blind users on Twitter and read their blog posts about daily obstacles, from wrong trams and unmarked intersections to missing audio cues and downright broken sidewalks. From there, he began assembling an app that could describe a surrounding environment entirely through sound.

The Coco partnership addresses a problem Pirttimaa said has worsened. “Sidewalks, they are a space where blind people sometimes are afraid to go because of e-scooters,” the founder said, adding both Bolt and Voi operate in Finland where he lives. “They are silent. They can go really fast. They can be parked incorrectly.”

But rather than calling for bans on them, Pirttimaa sees a technological fix: “If blind people would know about those e-scooters that are incorrectly parked, it would be beneficial. Robots, they are sharing the same space, and they encounter the same problems. But if that is shared to BlindSquare, then I can notify a blind user that, hey, there is an e-scooter on your way.”

A living map no city has built

The core value proposition is data that municipalities simply do not collect. Carl Hansen, Coco’s vice president of government relations, said the company has discovered that even cities with existing sidewalk data are working off stale information.

“Often when we first go to cities, we ask, what mapping data do you have?” he told Fortune. “Maps that haven’t been updated in a long, long time.”

The data points collected by Coco robots differ from that. “This is fresh to the day, to the hour, to the minute.”

The mapping system works on tiered persistence. When a robot encounters an obstacle, the system categorizes it and assigns a duration. A toppled e-scooter might stay in the map for six hours; active construction could remain for a week.

“The next Coco that comes along checks if it’s there again, and if it’s still there, maybe it gets added for another longer period,” Hansen explained, while structural issues get logged permanently, until the city fixes them.

The companies are also building a two-way exchange. BlindSquare users who pass a previously flagged location can report that an obstacle has been cleared, which in turn updates Coco’s internal routing maps. “There’s a kind of feedback loop making this better for all users,” Hansen said.

Coco CEO Zach Rash framed the partnership as the natural extension of infrastructure the company built for its own survival. “One of the first things we had to build as a company was turn-by-turn directions that are distinct for a robot, and that’s different than car directions. That’s also different than walking directions,” Rash said. “As a byproduct of that, that’s probably the best way for most people to walk through the city. But particularly if you’re blind or in a wheelchair, you’re just rolling the dice if you try to take the straightest path in some of these cities.”

Coco, a robot based delivery service located in Venice, promises that their two wheeled, remotely controlled and shocking pink bots will deliver your groceries, meals, and beverage order to your door in 15 minutes or less
Zach Rash, the CEO of Coco robots.

Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Robots as eyes, not obstacles

Rash pointed to the Abbot Kinney neighborhood in Venice Beach, California (Coco’s most operationally difficult market) as an early proof of concept. The area’s old sidewalks are riddled with 14-inch curbs and missing curb cuts—ramps that ease the transition between sidewalk and road—effectively creating “islands” inaccessible to anyone in a wheelchair or navigating without sight.

Using its mapping data, Coco ran an accessibility analysis and identified just three locations where, if the city installed curb cuts, it would unlock connectivity across the entire neighborhood. “You don’t need to fix everything,” Rash said. “There’s a very small number of choke points that, if you fix that, the city gets super accessible.”

Los Angeles installed the cuts, but Rash said the BlindSquare partnership is what makes the improvement legible to the people who need it most. “Fixing it is cool, but now people need to know to go that way and know how much more accessible it is.”

The partnership also hints at both BlindSquare and Coco’s broader ambitions for its sidewalk data. In Helsinki, they’re working with Swarco on a system where a robot waiting at an intersection could detect a crowd of pedestrians and dynamically extend the crossing time by communicating with smart traffic lights. Pirttimaa noted that Swarco already implemented a feature allowing robots to virtually “press” crosswalk buttons, a capability that was subsequently extended to BlindSquare users.

“Robots were kind of opening roads to the blind user side,” he said. “It’s not always something we need to build for the blind people. We can build services in a city that benefit everyone.”

How to Save Up $50K Fast For a Downpayment


One of the downsides to real estate is that the best ways to invest require a lot of money. 

If you buy properties directly, you’ll likely need at least $50,000 to $100,000 between the down payment, closing costs, initial repair costs, and cash reserves. 

You’ll need just as much if you invest passively in syndications—at least if you do so by yourself (which is why I go in on them with a co-investing club and invest $5,000 at a time instead). 

But if you do want to get to $50,000 fast, what are your options? 

The Income Side

You can grow your savings rate from one of two directions: earning more or spending less. Ideally, you do both at the same time. 

Sell your stuff

Have a yard sale (or garage sale, rummage sale, or whatever you call it in your neck of the woods). 

Sell all the stuff that’s cluttering up your basement, garage, and closets. Post the best and most valuable items on Facebook Marketplace and Craigslist first, and encourage people to come to your yard sale to see what else you have. 

You won’t make a fortune, but you’ll have more money and less clutter, which is always nice. 

Rent your stuff

Don’t want to part with some items forever, but not using them either? Rent out your tools, camera gear, ski equipment, or whatever else has real value that you’re not using. 

You can also rent out storage space in your home through websites like Sparefoot and Neighbor. For that matter, you can also rent out parking for cars, boats, RVs, and more if you have the space for them. 

Bring in a housemate

When I bought my first house, I rented out the other bedroom to a stranger I met through Craigslist. Fifteen years later, she and her husband are two of my best friends, and their kids are close to my daughter. 

Start or expand a side hustle

I’ve written before about real estate side hustles that can pay $100K+ a year. But no one says it has to be real estate-related. 

Do graphic design, bookkeeping, or freelance writing on the side. I myself still do some freelance work as a financial writer, and I love it. 

Prefer working with your hands? Offer handyman services. Bake customized cakes. Get creative. 

You can even flip free or cheap stuff you find on Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, Freecycle, and garage sales. Clean it up and sell it at a premium. 

Get a raise

If you’ve coasted for too long at work, consider cleaning up your resume and taking a new job for a pay raise. 

Or sit down with your boss and say, “I believe in what we’re doing here, and I think I could do more to help. What opportunities do you have for me to take on more responsibility and advancement?”

It’s not always that easy to get a promotion—but sometimes it is. 

The Spending Side

Even as you’re adding income, trim down your spending to supercharge your savings rate. 

Use the subscription kill switch

Suspend or pause every subscription you have. Every…single…one. No exceptions. 

That goes for entertainment like video and music streaming services, of course. But it also goes for convenience services, software, and more. 

Do an audit, going back over every credit card statement for the last year. Look not just for monthly payments but annual renewals as well

Pause every one, and in a month from now, go back and resume the few that you really, truly left a gaping hole in your life. Leave the others behind. 

Cut out commercial food and drink

I love a great meal out as much as the next guy. But for a savings sprint, you should prepare everything yourself. 

That goes for meals, of course (including work lunches), but also beverages like coffee, tea, and alcohol. No more Starbucks lattes or happy hour beers. You can only have what you’ve stocked at home until you’ve reached your savings goal. 

Take the pantry challenge

We all throw things in our freezers and pantries, only to forget they’re there. 

Take the pantry challenge: Eat only what you already have in your kitchen until you’ve cleaned out your freezer and pantry. You can make an exception for ultra-perishables like eggs, but that’s it. 

Need recipe ideas? Tell ChatGPT what you have and ask what you could make. You’ll be surprised at the creative ideas you come away with. 

Enter a shopping moratorium

Likewise, you’re not allowed to buy any clothes or personal items until your savings sprint finishes. 

You can make an exception for bare essentials like toothpaste. But no expensive beauty products, shoes, jackets, or clothing of any kind. 

You have plenty of clothes in your closet for survival. And if you go a season without wearing the latest clothing trend on TikTok, that’s the price of building real wealth rather than the appearance of it. 

Embrace free entertainment

It’s easy to pay for prepackaged entertainment, especially with kids: amusement parks, video arcades, restaurants and bars, escape rooms, and travel. 

On a savings sprint, stop paying for entertainment. Embrace hiking and biking. Borrow free audiobooks, e-books, and paper books from the library. For that matter, borrow movies, video games, and jigsaw puzzles from the library, too. Have game nights with your friends or significant other. 

You’d be surprised how much fun you can have for free. 

Bike or scooter instead of driving

For six years, my family lived without a car. It was awesome. 

Granted, you probably aren’t willing to give up a car entirely. But every time you go somewhere, ask yourself if you could bike there instead. 

As they say, biking saves you money and runs on fat, while driving costs you money and makes you fat. To this day, I aim to walk or bike or scooter to get around town, even though we have a car again. 

Explore Ways to Invest With Less

Yes, you need $50K-$100K for real estate investments like rental properties or syndications—if you invest by yourself without exploring alternatives. 

One option you may not have explored is joint venture partnerships. If you want to buy directly, or if you know a skilled investor, you could partner on a deal together and come up with less money. We form plenty of private partnerships in my co-investing club as well, whether to flip houses, land, or build barndominiums. 

You can also go in on syndications with a group of investors, something else I do every month in the co-investing club. I put $5,000 at a time in different deals

Or you can lend money through a secured note. I do that too.

For that matter, you can invest in real estate investment trusts (REITs). They’re liquid and easy to buy, and you don’t need much money to invest. The problem: They share too close a correlation with the stock market. In fact, they’re effectively just another sector of the stock market. 

Go on a savings sprint. But rather than putting $50,000 to $100,000 in a single investment, consider spreading that among 10 to 20 different real estate investments for true diversification. Practice dollar-cost averaging, investing $2,500 to $5,000 a month in new investments rather than one-off $50,000 investments. 

Take it from someone who’s invested both ways—it’s a more comfortable way to invest.

3 Vanguard ETFs Crushing the S&P 500 in 2026


2026 has included a major rotation away from the mega-cap tech stocks that led the market for years. With the economy showing signs of slowing and the labor market weakening, investors took a meaningful step toward establishing more defensive positioning within equities.

Sectors that have long underperformed, such as consumer staples and materials, have already delivered big returns this year. Value, low volatility, and small-cap stocks have also been beating the S&P 500 (^GSPC +1.20%).

If you’re still focused on tech and growth stocks, you’re probably leaving some gains on the table. These Vanguard ETFs have all turned it around in 2026 to lead the market higher.

Image source: Getty Images.

Key takeaways

  • The S&P 500 is up about 3% year to date, but seven of the 11 S&P sectors are outperforming the index.
  • Iran effectively closing the Strait of Hormuz has disrupted roughly 20% of global oil supplies, triggering a sharp rally in energy stocks.
  • Consumer staples and value stocks have benefited from a different shift: investors rotating away from expensive growth stocks and into cyclical and defensive equities.
  • All three ETFs have tailwinds that could keep them outperforming through the remainder of 2026.

ETF comparison table

Metric Vanguard Energy ETF (VDE) Vanguard Consumer Staples ETF (VDC) Vanguard Mega Cap Value ETF (MGV)
2026 YTD return +28.5% +6.4% +6.3%
Expense ratio 0.09% 0.09% 0.05%
Dividend yield 2.3% 2.2% 2%
10-year beta 1.02 0.98 0.91
# holdings 106 104 120
Primary driver Geopolitical shock Defensive demand Value rotation
Risk profile High Moderate Moderate

Data source: Vanguard.

1. Vanguard Energy ETF

The Vanguard Energy ETF (VDE 3.02%) is up nearly 30% year to date as the Iran war wreaks havoc on the oil market. The biggest reason is that higher oil prices generate larger margins for the companies in all points along the stream. With no clear endpoint to the Iran war in sight, energy prices could remain high well into the second half of 2026. Even if a resolution is reached, it could take a while for prices to fall back down to where they were pre-conflict.

But geopolitical events tend to be tenuous and unpredictable. If oil prices shoot higher because of the war, they could come right back down once a resolution is achieved. That means there’s risk that the energy sector’s rally this year could reverse quickly. It doesn’t look like that’s happening soon, though. Energy stocks could remain a leader.

2. Vanguard Consumer Staples ETF

When conditions start to deteriorate, investors become less willing to pay premium prices for growth stocks. That has happened this year, where price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios on tech stocks have shrunk even though earnings growth has remained strong. Instead, investors have favored more value-oriented defensive stocks.

The Vanguard Consumer Staples ETF (VDC +1.41%) doesn’t offer the most exciting portfolio in the world, but it does serve a purpose when people are seeking out safety. That’s exactly what happened in 2026 as principal protection took on a little more importance. If the U.S. economy continues to show signs of slowing, I’d expect consumer staples stocks to remain in high demand. They may not produce gains while the market is declining, but there’s a good chance they’ll lose less.

3. Vanguard Mega Cap Value ETF

It probably goes without saying that value stocks haven’t been in favor for some time — certainly not when the artificial intelligence (AI) trade was booming. But once the boom period showed signs of peaking and investors began to question whether all that investment in development would ultimately be worth it, the door opened for a rotation into value. That’s exactly what happened.

The Vanguard Mega Cap Value ETF (MGV +0.82%) is beating the S&P 500 by about 4% year to date on that rotation back into more defensive areas of the market. Trading at a forward P/E of 17, this portfolio is more expensive than its historical average. But it’s much less expensive than the rest of the market. That can play very well when investors seek out safety and durability.