RealClearMarkets Articles

He Did Not Intend to Lose $50 Million. No One Does

Phil Phillips - March 27, 2026

He did not intend to lose $50 million. No one does. It happened in a decentralized finance market — a system with no intermediary, no routing discretion, and no mechanism to question the order. The screen did not feel like risk. It felt like function. A clean interface. A position on one side, a token on the other. A path between them, already drawn. The system had done the thinking. All that remained was consent. There was a warning. There is always a warning. But warnings, when they are attached to ordinary actions, become part of the ritual. A box to check. A friction to clear. Not a...

Trump's Private Investment Initiative Boosts Workers, Businesses, and the Economy

Charles Sauer - March 27, 2026

For millions of Americans, affordability isn’t just about gas or groceries. It’s also about whether they will be able to retire comfortably and with dignity. The Department of Labor (DOL) may imminently propose a rulemaking that could set the stage for a modernized retirement system for working Americans with 401(k) plans.  President Trump has made lowering costs and expanding financial opportunity central to his economic agenda. At his recent State of the Union address, he highlighted efforts to expand access to retirement savings for workers without employer-sponsored...

Book Review: John Malone's Spectacular "Born to Be Wired"

John Tamny - March 27, 2026

I read Atlas Shrugged in 1994. It was also in 1994 that I first read about cable television visionary John Malone. He was in the news quite a bit thanks to the growing prominence of cable, but also because Al Gore had formerly referred to him as “Darth Vader.” It’s hard to say why, but Malone was the person I associated Hank Rearden with. Unhappy that such a prominent doer was routinely under attack by government, but also of the view that Malone must be brilliant if the small minds in government disliked him so much, I made it a point from 1994 on to own shares in Liberty...

Export Controls Risk Forfeiting the AI Race

Michael Daugherty - March 27, 2026

In an era increasingly defined by great-power competition with China, the nation with the strongest commercial technological base will hold a decisive military and economic advantage. Winning the global AI race is therefore not simply an economic objective — it is a national-security imperative. Thanks to unmatched innovative capacity, the United States still leads in artificial intelligence. But maintaining that lead requires more than protecting today’s breakthroughs. It requires ensuring that tomorrow’s global AI ecosystem — from chips and cloud platforms to...


As ChatGPT and Claude Replace Quants, How Can We Unleash AI Capital Markets Era?

Saul Cohen - March 26, 2026

AI is here…and here …for finance. But it’s not that simple. Finance has built a powerful mythology around data advantage. But, despite the availability of advanced technology and information delivery methods, much of today’s Wall Street still operates on shockingly thin, fragmented, and poorly managed data. It’s been that way since the 1980s. Bloomberg terminals, S&P Global feeds, and other vendor platforms actively monetize the scarcity. An industry within finance exists to sell limited datasets as premium intelligence (often at an equally...

Passive Index Investing and Large Shareholders' Pursuit of Political Goals

Benjamin Zycher - March 26, 2026

Opportunities to spend other people’s money are a joy, and a fortiori when the goals being pursued are political and thus guaranteed to elicit applause from the right-minded at all the right cocktail parties. This is a substantial problem for corporate governance, as proposals presented for shareholder votes often have little to do with business operations that in principle are supposed to maximize shareholder value, that is, the economic value of investments in the given company.  Instead, many such proposals are blatantly political: environmental (reductions in...

The Problems With Victor Davis Hanson and Economics

Walter Block - March 26, 2026

Professor Hanson has had it with economists. We are a “doctrinaire” group of supposed scholars. We fawn over “free trade.” (Anyone, such as this author, who places scare quotes around about the phase depicting this system, has to be watched carefully. This institution, favored by Adam Smith, has done more for the human race than perhaps any other institution known to man). Hanson’s main objection to this system is what he characterizes as “unfair trade.” And by this he points to when one country racks up “massive mercantilist surpluses,”...

The Bigger Meaning of a Potential Lyme Disease Vaccine

John Tamny - March 26, 2026

“I didn’t get better on his steady dose of antibiotics, the constant pain didn’t go away — while the advice to go off antibiotics entirely led to disasters, where I stopped the drugs and disintegrated quickly.” That's what New York Times columnist Ross Douthat wrote about his painful and long battle with Lyme Disease. Though some are lucky enough to recover quickly from the malady, others don’t. Douthat’s passage was plainly awful, and readers no doubt know other people personally who suffered a recovery like Douthat’s. There’s no way of...


What Baseball and Thomas Sowell Can Teach Us About Disparities

David Kalist - March 26, 2026

The 2026 Major League Baseball season is the 151st season since the National League began play in 1876. It offers a useful way to think about disparities. One disparity stands out at once: baseball talent is not spread across the states in proportion to population. Using all players who made their MLB debut between 2020 and 2025, I compare each state’s actual number of debuting players with the number expected from that state’s share of births in the relevant cohorts. I then calculate an actual-to-expected ratio. A value above one means a state produced more players than expected....

Defense Spending, and the 5% of GDP Fallacy

John Tamny - March 25, 2026

The idea that defense spending should somehow be a consistent percentage of GDP is as fallacious as it is wasteful. Consider a recent Washington Post editorial. It oddly asserted that “Throughout the Cold War, the U.S. consistently spent more than 5 percent of GDP on its military.” The editorial’s point, and also lament, was that defense spending “hasn’t reached that level in decades, hovering around 3 percent in recent years.”   Without getting into what an impressively awful number GDP is as a measure of anything, that defense spending as a...

The Most Dangerous Four Letter Word In Leadership

Michele Jech - March 25, 2026

There is a four-letter word quietly sabotaging engagement, trust, and hope in our workplaces. It shows up in interviews, emails, meetings, and performance conversations. It sounds harmless. Efficient, even, but it’s not. The word is just. “I just need you to…” “We just need to move up this timeline.” “I just need the deck done by…”  But just is rarely just. Early in my career, I learned this the hard way. I was interviewing for my first executive role at a large organization. The final interview was with a new...

Will Trump (and Russ Vought) Protect Your Financial Data?

Charles Sauer - March 25, 2026

The 2010 Dodd-Frank financial “reform” bill may be tied with Obamacare as the most destructive piece of legislation passed between 2009-2011, when Democrats controlled the White House and both chambers of Congress. The legislation codified the “too big to fail” doctrine and imposed costly regulations on the financial sector. These regulations hit small banks the hardest, causing many of them to merge with big banks and thus increasing concentration in the banking industry. If that weren’t bad enough, Dodd-Frank also created a new...


Why Are We Clinging To a Law That Makes Gasoline More Expensive?

Kristen Walker - March 25, 2026

Gasoline prices have surged since conflict broke out in the Middle East between Iran and the U.S., with the former escalating its attacks on oil tankers and infrastructure in the region. President Trump just waived the 106-yr-old Jones Act to help alleviate the subsequent pain at the pump, a law which really belongs in the scrap bin of history. Intended to maintain a strong domestic maritime industry, the Jones Act requires goods shipped between American ports to be transported on vessels that are built, owned, flagged, and crewed by the U.S. No other comparably stringent...

The Real Debt Crisis Is That There Will Be No Debt Crisis

John Tamny - March 24, 2026

Budgetary experts have been promising us a future “crisis” related to the national debt for years, and in some instances, decades. If you’re reading this, you likely know some of their names: MacGuineas, Riedl, Galston, Bourne, Boccia, Jenkins, Rampell, and even Musk. To say the list is truncated insults understatement. Without much exaggeration, you could fill a Rose Bowl with all the economists, pundits and politicians who’ve long associated “national debt” with “disaster” and “crisis.” The unfortunate news for the myriad...

AI Infrastructure Will Win U.S. the AI Race

Harry Richer - March 24, 2026

Behind every hyperscale data centre lies a global free market of energy, copper, and logistics that must be discussed just as much as artificial intelligence. The Hidden Supply Chain Powering the AI Revolution The AI boom sweeping across the United States is one of the most consequential economic developments of our lifetimes. It promises to transform medicine, commerce, and communication on a scale that very few people are seriously grappling with. Most of the commentary focuses on software: the models, the breakthroughs, the jobs that will exist or cease to exist. Far fewer people are...

The End of FTC Political Warfare: Is It Coming Soon?

Andrew Langer - March 24, 2026

More than a year into President Trump’s second term, most of the Biden administration’s aggressive antitrust agenda has been rolled back. But one major case remains: the Federal Trade Commission’s lawsuit against Southern Glazer’s Wine and Spirits. It is one of — and arguably the very last of — the leftover Neo-Brandeisian Lina Khan cases still on the FTC’s docket. Ending it would finally close the book on an era that treated low prices and business efficiency as suspect, saving taxpayers tens of millions in litigation...


The Danger of Legislation Meant To Ease the Burden of Parenting

John Tamny - March 24, 2026

“You can’t ever take your eyes off them.” That's what parents tell would-be parents about parenting: it’s constant.  Which is arguably what makes parenting so fulfilling: the work. Fulfillment and joy are a mirror into the endless effort and frequent exhaustion that parenting implies. The deep meaning of parenting comes to mind as South Carolina legislators consider HB 4591, the Stop Harm From Addictive Social Media Act. Among other things, the bill would require that social media platforms verify age of users, it would prohibit allegedly "addictive design...

The FAA Will Prevent Chaos at O'Hare Before It Starts

Ike Brannon - March 24, 2026

The O’Hare Airport is important for more than just Chicago: As the busiest airport in the country and hub for the two largest airlines, it has a disproportionate impact on the national air system. Delays, cancellations, and missed connections there inevitably propagate across the country.  Its outsized importance is precisely why the Federal Aviation Administration’s new proposal to reduce overscheduled flights at O’Hare is so important and welcome. It is a commonsense intervention aimed at preventing chaos before it starts. At issue is the...

If the Aim Is Affordability, Why Is JD Vance Pushing New Rail Regs?

Matthew Kandrach - March 23, 2026

The Trump administration is urgently moving to bring down energy prices. From releasing oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to considering temporary waivers of the Jones Act, the White House is signaling that stabilizing fuel costs and ensuring reliable energy supply are top priorities.Those efforts reflect a basic reality: energy affordability underpins the broader American economy. When oil, gasoline, diesel, and electricity prices rise, the effects ripple through manufacturing, agriculture, transportation, and household budgets.But even as the administration takes steps to increase...

To Achieve Greater Electricity Affordability, We Need a True Marketplace

Ike Brannon - March 23, 2026

Lately, PJM, the regional electric grid manager that connects 13 states and the District of Colombia, has been in the news but for all the wrong reasons. Stretching from the Carolinas to Chicago, PJM’s core problem is that customers who live and work inside its footprint are facing higher electric bills, and there are no plausible solutions that will provide ratepayers relief anytime soon.  PJM was created in the early 1920s, but its current construct took shape about 25 years ago during the energy deregulation movement that swept the country.  There were many rationales for...

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