Rick's Market Brief

Monday, May 11, 2026 — Curated by Raphael for Rick Shea
S&P fut -0.05%
Nasdaq fut -0.04%
Brent $105.47 (+3.14%)
WTI $98.51 (+4.60%)
10Y 4.394%
DXY 97.98 (+0.09%)
Nikkei -0.38%
CPI (Tue) ~3.7% y/y est

Top Story

Macro Setup

Oil Gaps Above $100 as US Rejects Iran Peace Proposal — 24 Hours Before April CPI

Overnight: the US publicly dismissed Iran's latest peace offer and Brent jumped 3.14% to $105.47, WTI +4.60% to $98.51 — both with a real bid through the Asia session. Sell-side desks are flagging a $110–$150 range if Strait of Hormuz disruption deepens; reporting cites roughly 1 billion barrels of supply already removed over the past two months. Asia softened on the headlines (Nikkei -0.38% to 62,474; Hang Seng flat at 26,407), Europe is mixed, and US futures are barely down — S&P -0.05%, Nasdaq -0.04%.

The bond and FX response is the real tell. The 10-year is at 4.394% in pre-market and the dollar firmed nine basis points to DXY 97.98 on safe-haven flow. That four-corner combo — oil up, yields up, dollar up, equities flat — is the classic stagflationary-impulse pattern, and it lands 24 hours before April CPI tomorrow at 8:30. Cleveland Fed nowcast 3.56% headline; Barclays 3.7% y/y with a hot 0.55% m/m; ANZ at 3.9% y/y. Energy was already the upside-surprise risk in the print. NAAIM near full-invested off six straight up weeks. Asymmetric, and not in the bulls' favor.

Reads for consumer/retail: (1) Re-check oil beta — airlines, parcel/last-mile, thin-margin discretionary are first-order if Brent holds > $100. (2) Dollar firming plus a potentially hot CPI is a double-headwind for EM consumer names. (3) Home Depot 5/19 and Walmart 5/21 — fuel/freight pass-through commentary carries extra weight after a tape like this. The orderly futures print isn't stability, it's complacency before a known event.

Hedge Fund & Investment Management

~6-minute audio brief Hedge fund + macro + regulation, narrated.
Hedge Funds Talent

Citadel Wins Another Reneged-Move From Millennium — Pricing Power at the Top of the Multi-Strat Market

Hedgeweek reported overnight that Citadel landed a senior trader who had previously committed to Millennium and then reversed course — the second public reneged-move involving that desk in recent months. Less about any one seat, more about pricing power at the top end. Comp inflation that came with April's multi-strat rebound is real money, not survey ink. Indirect read for a fundamental long/short shop: the pod-shop bid is back in the names they rotate through, which amplifies both directions on crowded consumer and retail trades — keep an eye on factor crowding before tomorrow's CPI.

Macro Setup

Pre-Market Setup: Energy + Rates Up, Equities Flat, CPI Tomorrow — The Asymmetric Window

Through 7:30 AM ET: S&P futures -0.05%, Nasdaq -0.04%, Dow -0.04%; Brent +3.14% to $105.47, WTI +4.60% to $98.51; 10Y to 4.394%; DXY +0.09% to 97.98; Asia (Nikkei -0.38%, Hang Seng +0.05%) softer, Europe mixed. The orderliness of equity futures given the size of the energy and rates move is the signal — vol contained, dispersion books quiet, complacency before a known catalyst. Right posture this morning: tighten oil-beta exposure on the consumer book, double-check the rate-sensitive sleeve (autos, durables, housing-adjacent) before the 10-year extends further, treat the futures calm as a window to position rather than confirmation the move is over.

Macro Calendar

Week Ahead Recalibrated: CPI Tomorrow, Trump-Xi Thu-Fri, HD/WMT Next Week — Energy Resets the Risk Map

The week's calendar didn't change; what changed overnight is the conditional path. Tuesday April CPI at 8:30 — the energy contribution from Brent > $100 is now the live upside-surprise risk. Thursday-Friday Trump-Xi summit in Beijing — trade, Iran, Taiwan, AI on the agenda; China's April exports printed +14.1% y/y giving Xi leverage. Following Monday/Wednesday: Home Depot 5/19, Walmart 5/21 — first real consumer-comp read of the post-tariff, post-jobs-soft cycle. Equities go in with S&P at fresh ATHs after six up weeks; the asymmetric pain trade is a hot CPI on top of an unhedged book.

Regulation & Compliance

Regulation

Form PF Comment Window — Final Six Weeks to June 23; Mid-Size Advisers Have the Most to Gain

Status check on the April 20 Form PF re-proposal heading into the final stretch: general filing threshold $150M → $1B AUM (cuts ~half of filers); large hedge fund adviser threshold $1.5B → $10B (cuts ~two-thirds of large filers, retains 80%+ of HF GAV); look-through replaced with reasonable-estimate; current reporting simplified or eliminated for many categories. Comment period closes June 23. For an adviser in the $1.5B–$10B band — i.e., the meat of the single-manager universe — this is meaningful annual cost takeout and the comment letter is the direct lever before the rule lands.

Regulation

New Qualified Client Thresholds Effective June 29 — Subscription Docs and Eligibility Scripts Need a Refresh

Kirkland's note circulating this week: effective June 29, 2026, the SEC raises qualified client thresholds under the Advisers Act. AUM threshold $1.1M → $1.4M with the adviser; net worth threshold $2.2M → $2.7M, excluding primary residence. For any vehicle charging performance fees, subscription documents, marketing materials, and investor-eligibility scripts need a refresh before quarter-end. Compliance should also reset prospect-screening logic for anyone not yet under contract on the 29th.

AI & Alternative Investments

AI Private Credit

BlackRock Aladdin Expands Private Credit Solutions on Preqin — AI-Driven Research and Standardized Benchmarks

BlackRock's Aladdin platform expanded its private credit solutions on Preqin this week, adding new analytics and AI-driven research tools targeted at private credit transparency, standardized benchmarks, and an integrated research workflow. Lands inside a broader BlackRock framing — Larry Fink's note over the weekend that AI is creating a "new trillion-dollar asset class" and that AI and energy infrastructure are the two priority capex themes for 2026. For an L/S equity seat, the read-through is on positioning: institutional allocators are continuing to push capital toward the AI-infrastructure complex (power, data centers, hyperscalers), which keeps the factor crowding risk live in any consumer name that's been used as a funding short for that trade.

AI Tools for Investment Management

What's actually new on the desk.

AI Workflow

JPMorgan Reclassifies AI as Core Infrastructure — $2B Annual Budget, 230K Employees on Internal LLM Suite

Fresh coverage out overnight: JPMorgan has formally reclassified its AI spend as core infrastructure with a $2B 2026 budget. The proprietary LLM Suite is now deployed to over 230,000 employees across 500+ production use cases — fraud detection, IB workflows, compliance review, predictive liquidity management. The signal for buy-side desks isn't the dollar figure; it's the reclassification. When the largest US bank treats AI as infrastructure (not initiative), the procurement, vendor, and integration patterns trickle outward fast. The relevant question for a fundamental analyst desk shifts from "can we build this?" to "what wrappers and policies before we deploy a frontier-model agent against earnings transcripts and broker research?"