Morgan Stanley’s Crypto Charter Bombshell – Epic Boost for XRP as TradFi Embraces Ripple Tech

Morgan Stanley’s most recent regulatory filing drew attention from cryptocurrency market analyst Pumpius, who characterizes it as a significant signal for Ripple and XRP as traditional finance expands its involvement with digital assets.

He claimed in a recent post that the Wall Street organization’s choice to go for a federally regulated digital trust is similar to the compliance route Ripple took months earlier, bringing XRP’s institutional story back into focus.

Morgan Stanley has applied for a national trust bank charter to establish Morgan Stanley Digital Trust, a structure that would enable the company to custody digital assets under federal supervision.

Large institutions look for structured exposure to blockchain-based assets, and this move puts the bank in a stronger position within the regulated crypto custody market.

This filing gives Ripple the go-ahead based on regulatory alignment rather than a direct endorsement. Ripple established a digital asset custody vehicle under federal supervision in late 2025 when it received conditional approval for Ripple National Trust Bank.

Morgan Stanley is now supporting the broader trend toward compliance-driven infrastructure through similar initiatives. Morgan Stanley’s advisory framework, which oversees trillions of client assets across wealth and institutional divisions, would naturally benefit from the addition of digital custody services.

A national trust charter would formalize the bank’s ability to safeguard digital holdings in compliance with federal regulations if approved by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

Oracle’s AI Ambition Turns Bloody: Thousands of Jobs on the Chopping Block

Oracle plans to eliminate thousands of jobs as part of its efforts to address a cash crunch stemming from a massive AI data center expansion. The job reductions could be implemented as soon as this month and will impact divisions throughout the company.

Oracle Stock Rebounds, but AI Spending and Leverage Risks Cloud Outlook

Some of the cuts will target job categories the company anticipates needing fewer of because of AI. Under the direction of Chairman Larry Ellison, Oracle is starting a historic data center expansion to support AI workloads for clients like OpenAI.

The company, known for its database software, has been expanding its cloud computing division in recent years with an emphasis on artificial intelligence (AI) in an effort to challenge market leader Amazon. Com Inc. and Microsoft Corp.

Wall Street predicts that Oracle’s cash flow will be negatively impacted by the cloud unit’s data center expenditures in the upcoming years, before the expenditures start to pay off in 2030.

Oracle announced last month that it would use a combination of debt and equity sales to raise to $50 billion this year.

The planned reductions are anticipated to be more extensive than the company’s usual rolling job cuts. According to people with knowledge of the move, Oracle announced internally this week that it would review many of the open job listings in its cloud division, thereby freezing the hiring process.

The company employed roughly 162,000 people worldwide. According to the people, preparations for the workforce reductions are still ongoing and may change. Investors responded favorably to Oracle’s early efforts as an AI cloud provider, and the stock increased 20 percent last year and 61 percent in 2024.

Silver Holds Firm at $82 Amid Escalating Iran Conflict Boost

Silver (XAG/USD) continues to rise in the early Asian session on Friday, hovering around $82. White metal is boosted by the ongoing US-Israeli campaign against Iran, which offers safe-haven support. In search of new motivation, traders await the release of the important US employment report for February.

Silver’s Momentum Reset Sets the Stage for the Next Leg Higher

Iran launched a new round of missile and drone attacks throughout the Gulf on Thursday, with attacks reported in Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates. US President Donald

Trump claimed that Iranian officials had contacted him in an effort to come to an end to the conflict, but he maintained that it was too late and that the US was working to destroy Iran.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, meanwhile, declared that his nation had not asked for a ceasefire and had no plans to engage in negotiations. In the short term, a safe-haven asset like silver may benefit from growing tensions between the US and Iran as well as worries about a protracted conflict in the Middle East.

Silver is still in a long-term bullish trend after surpassing its 1980 peak of $50.36 per ounce in 2025.

Industrial and speculative demand for silver has skyrocketed. According to the Silver Institute, demand will exceed supply in 2025, resulting in a 117.70 million-ounce deficit. When the price of silver reached a new record high in 2025, it attracted significant buying interest because it is a highly speculative metal.

Silver Institute projected silver demand to stay “largely unchanged in 2026, as healthy gains in retail investment are likely to offset most of the losses across other key demand segments, notably in jewelry, silverware, and industrial demand.”

A weak US dollar and the likelihood of declining U.S. interest rates have been positive for silver prices.

$100 Oil on the Horizon: Growing Chorus of Traders Warns of Prolonged Iran Disruption

Energy executives and traders are cautioning that the world is getting closer to a tipping point, with some predicting $100 crude within days, even though oil prices are still far below levels seen in past crises.

The number of empty oil supertankers in the Gulf is decreasing, and ship traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has virtually stopped, accelerating the need to reduce further production. Physical energy markets are already showing signs of strain, with production cuts at refineries in Asia and the Middle East driving up the cost of goods like jet fuel and diesel. Oil prices are still much lower than they were during earlier crises, a week into one of the largest disruptions to the world’s energy markets.

However, a growing number of energy executives and traders are cautioning that the world is getting closer to a tipping point every day that the war continues; some have predicted that crude will reach $100 in a matter of days. Ship traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has all but halted
Even though the price of gas and oil has increased this week, it is still far lower than it was shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine.

Brent crude prices surged above $90 per barrel on Friday, extending their gain to more than a quarter this week, and there were indications that some of the initial calm in the oil market was beginning to fade. However, executives at four major trading houses, who wished to remain anonymous, stated that the market was still too complacent about the potential consequences of a protracted closure of the Strait of Hormuz and that, absent a de-escalation of hostilities, prices could reach $100 in few days. Physical energy markets are already showing signs of stress, as the price of goods like diesel and jet fuel has skyrocketed due to cuts at refineries in the Middle East and Asia

. According to former White House official Bob McNally, president of consulting firm Rapidan Energy Group, the market is still getting used to the potential duration of Hormuz’s closure. Brent is expected to reach $100 per barrel and higher in the future.
US President Donald Trump, who has defended his ability to control fuel prices, finds it difficult to deal with rising costs.

The cost of gasoline has never been higher than it has been during his presidency. This week, the White House has made multiple unsuccessful attempts to calm the oil markets. When the flow of energy from the Gulf region might resume is a crucial question for oil and gas traders. Storage tanks fill up every day that oil doesn’t pass through Hormuz, forcing producers to reduce output. This week, Qatar ceased producing LNG, and Iraq started cutting back. Undoubtedly, the market’s destiny is contingent upon the course of the conflict, and any end to hostilities or indication of Hormuz’s unblocking would cause oil prices to plummet once more.

Trump announced on Tuesday that the US would offer naval escorts and insurance guarantees to guarantee the safety of oil tankers and other vessels traveling through Hormuz. The announcement was made on the last day of the reporting period for positioning data collected by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and ICE Futures Europe, which revealed that investors reduced their long-only wagers on WTI and Brent to begin the week.

The muted bullish reaction was a reflection of traders’ belief that the conflict would be a contained, surgical operation, which led to a sharp price spike followed by a quick retreat, as well as their unwavering belief that the Trump administration would intervene with a last-minute policy change to lower energy prices.

Silver Stuck at $82 on Boost from Ongoing Middle East Tensions with Iran

Silver (XAG/USD) continues to rise in the early Asian session on Friday, hovering around $82.

White metal is boosted by the ongoing US-Israeli campaign against Iran, which offers safe-haven support. In search of new motivation, traders await the release of the important US employment report for February.

Silver’s Momentum Reset Sets the Stage for the Next Leg Higher

Iran launched a new round of missile and drone attacks throughout the Gulf on Thursday, with attacks reported in Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates. US President Donald

Trump claimed that Iranian officials had contacted him in an effort to come to an end to the conflict, but he maintained that it was too late and that the US was working to destroy Iran.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, meanwhile, declared that his nation had not asked for a ceasefire and had no plans to engage in negotiations. In the short term, a safe-haven asset like silver may benefit from growing tensions between the US and Iran as well as worries about a protracted conflict in the Middle East.

Silver is still in a long-term bullish trend after surpassing its 1980 peak of $50.36 per ounce in 2025.

Industrial and speculative demand for silver has skyrocketed. According to the Silver Institute, demand will exceed supply in 2025, resulting in a deficit of 117.70 million ounces. When the price of silver reached a new record high in 2025, it attracted significant buying interest because it is a highly speculative metal.

Silver Institute projected silver demand to stay “largely unchanged in 2026, as healthy gains in retail investment are likely to offset most of the losses across other key demand segments, notably in jewelry, silverware, and industrial demand.”

A weak US dollar and the likelihood of declining U.S. interest rates have been positive for silver prices.

China Greenlights Pfizer’s Obesity Injection as Generic Rivals Approach

Pfizer’s new obesity treatment has been approved in China, increasing competition in a market that is about to get even more crowded because of mpending arrival of generics.

 

Pfizer announced via WeChat on Friday that the medication, ecnoglutide, is approved for long-term weight control in adults who are overweight or obese. The local startup Hangzhou Sciwind Bioscience Co. gave the company the rights to the treatment in China. in a late February deal worth $495 million.

Pfizer now joins a market dominated by multinational competitors Eli Lilly and Co. and Novo Nordisk A/S. along with Innovent Biologics, a Chinese pharmaceutical company

The approval coincides with Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy patent expiring later this month, which could lead to less expensive medications.  Novo and Lilly have already drastically reduced the cost of their medications due to the possibility of a price war from generics.

Pfizer, a relative latecomer to the obesity race, is working to increase its market share, including by acquiring Metsera for $10 billion.

Chief Executive Officer Albert Bourla stated that the company wants to participate in the “booming” obesity drug market in China and that purchasing Sciwind’s medication will provide commercial insights that will allow it to compete “in a very aggressive way.”

Similar to Wegovy, Sciwind’s medication imitates the natural hormone GLP-1, which controls hunger and blood sugar.

However, the company thinks that because of its slightly different structure, the medication is safer and more effective than other GLP-1 receptor agonists.

It was previously authorized for the treatment of diabetes. Ecnoglutide produced weight loss comparable to Eli Lilly’s Mounjaro, which targets one more hormone besides GLP-1, in a late-stage study. Patients on ecnoglutide experienced an average weight loss of 15.4 percent after 48 weeks.

Teck Hikes Silver, Germanium Fees in Korea Zinc Deal for 2026

Korea Zinc Co. and Canadian miner Teck Resources reached an agreement to charge more for silver and germanium in 2026 due to a spike in both metals’ prices, and to sell its zinc concentrates at a marginally higher processing fee.

Silver’s Momentum Reset Sets the Stage for the Next Leg Higher

Korea Zinc’s treatment charge for smelting concentrates, or semi-processed ores, increased to $85 per ton this year. This year’s $80-per-ton fee, which was the lowest benchmark level for the zinc industry in over 50 years, represents a slight improvement.

Low processing fees typically hurt them since treatment fees have historically made up around one-third of zinc smelters’ earnings,

Nevertheless, due to a remarkable increase in the price of silver, germanium, and other metals—which are also present in the concentrates it purchases from Teck and other miners—Korea Zinc recorded record profits in 2025.

Revenues from those byproducts in 2025 exceeded its zinc revenues due to a 150 percent increase in silver prices and a 75 percent increase in germanium prices.

Germanium is essential to defense systems and other cutting-edge technologies, and since China began imposing export restrictions on it and other vital minerals in 2023, prices have skyrocketed. Five percent of the world’s silver comes from Korea Zinc, which is also one of the largest producers of germanium and other essential minerals outside of China.

The largest zinc-lead mine, Teck’s Red Dog mine in Alaska, is a large provider of that metal.

Its output cannot currently be sold in China on competitive terms due to tariffs on incoming US goods.

Miners give smelters price breaks to cover the cost of recovering zinc, silver, and other metals. However, Teck and Korea Zinc agreed to lower the content threshold at which silver will become payable in this year’s agreement.

China Halts Diesel, Gasoline Exports as Middle East Conflict Tightens Crude Supply

China’s government ordered the country’s top oil refiners to cease exporting gasoline and diesel as the escalating conflict in the Persian Gulf interferes with the arrival of crude from one of the world’s largest producing regions.

Crude Oil Rebounds as Traders React to Escalating Regional Tensions

China’s restrictions just six days into a conflict demonstrate how Asia is rushing to prioritize domestic needs as the Middle East crisis worsens, even though the country is only the third-largest supplier of oil products to the region—its vast refining industry primarily meets domestic demand.

Representatives of the National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s top economic planner, reportedly called for an immediate temporary stop to shipments of refined goods. They asked to stay anonymous because the conversations are private.

The people claim that during a meeting earlier this week, refiners were told to stop signing new contracts and negotiate the cancellation of shipments that had already been agreed upon.

PetroChina Co., Sinopec, CNOOC Ltd., Zhejiang Petrochemical Co., a private refiner, and Sinochem Group. obtain the government’s fuel export quotas.

China prohibits the unrestricted export of jet fuel, gasoline, and diesel. The Ministry of Commerce chooses a small number of major refiners and traders using a quota system. Polyethylene, paraxylene, and other chemical feedstocks are examples of petrochemicals that are typically not subject to the same standing quota cap.

The quota system accomplishes several objectives. It allows the government to react quickly to market conditions and provides Beijing with a way to balance domestic supply and demand. China’s authorities have regularly reduced or postponed export quotas since the start of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, which also disrupted the world’s energy trade.

SoftBank Seeks Record $40 Billion Loan to Fund OpenAI Stake

SoftBank wants a loan of up to $40 billion, its largest-ever loan denominated entirely in dollars, primarily to help finance its investment in US tech giant OpenAI. JPMorgan Chase and Co. is one of four lenders. will be funding the facility, the individuals stated.

The potential loan amount highlights SoftBank founder Masayoshi Son’s aggressive attempt to establish his business as a key player in the global AI boom.

In addition to the more than $30 billion the company has already invested in the startup, which is now the focal point of Son’s goals, the $30 billion wager on OpenAI is a risk reminiscent of his initial investments in ByteDance Ltd. or Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., but at a much greater cost.

Assets, including its ownership of Nvidia Corp., have been sold by the Japanese company, which at the end of December held roughly 11% of OpenAI. to finance its increasing investment in OpenAI. Even as investments elsewhere slow, the US company now constitutes one of SoftBank’s largest holdings, along with a roughly 90% stake in chip designer Arm Holdings Plc. The Japanese company’s stock is linked to how well ChatGPT performs in comparison to Google’s Gemini and Anthropic PBC’s Claude.

US Government Eyes Sweeping Permits for Nvidia, AMD AI Chip Exports Worldwide

NVIDIA  dominates the AI industry, but the Trump administration wants to assume a formal position in the sector with comparable broad authority.

With Cash Settled, Focus Turns to Delivery in Nvidia–Intel Partnership

Draft regulations drafted by US Commerce Department officials would limit shipments of AI chips to any location in the world without US approval, giving Washington extensive control over whether and under what circumstances other nations can construct facilities for training and operating AI models.

Almost all exports of AI accelerators from companies like Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. would need US approval under the proposed rule, which could be significantly altered or abandoned completely.

A worldwide extension of restrictions that presently spans about 40 nations, according to people with knowledge of the situation. In the tech industry, these chips are the most sought-after parts—businesses like Alphabet Inc. and OpenAI.

The Commerce Department’s draft rule isn’t intended to be a ban on Nvidia exports, and President Donald Trump’s team has stated time and again that they want the world to use American AI. Instead, the rules would establish the US government as a gatekeeper for the AI sector, requiring businesses and, in certain situations, their governments to obtain Washington’s approval before purchasing the valuable accelerators.

The ability of nations to construct vital digital infrastructure—a technology that many world leaders view as essential to economic growth, corporate competitiveness, and military sovereignty—would then depend on how Trump’s team decides to distribute those licenses. With a few exceptions, shipments of up to 1,000 of Nvidia’s most recent GB300 graphics processing units, or GPUs, would go through a fairly straightforward review process.