Friday, March 6, 2026

Big Bear AI: Defense Giant With Trump Tailwinds?

Big Bear AI is a small-cap defense stock sitting at the crossroads of military intelligence, border security, and biometric technology, quietly powering the systems that the U.S. Army, national security agencies, and border operations rely on‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­‌   ­

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$100 a barrel

Trump says war is the priority.
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Iran fired a barrage of missiles and drones targeting a number of US allies across the Gulf on Friday, with particularly powerful blasts heard in Kuwait. Bahrain and Saudi Arabia were also attacked and missile alerts buzzed across Dubai for a second day.

Israel and the US continued their bombing campaign on Iran in a war that has killed more than 1,300 people there. More than 100 people in Lebanon have been killed in Israeli attacks against Iran-backed Hezbollah. 

Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian said Friday that some countries have initiated efforts for mediation in the hope of ending the bloodshed. While the Islamic Republic is "committed to lasting peace," he said, it will continue to defend itself. US President Donald Trump later called for Iran's "unconditional surrender."

Smoke rises after an Israeli airstrike in Beirut's southern suburbs on Friday. Lebanese authorities reported more than 100 people have been killed in Israeli attacks. Photographer: Ibrahim Amro/Getty Images

In the US, the price being paid for the war is largely economic. In less than a week, the cost of oil has jumped $20 a barrel and now sits at around $94, turbocharging affordability issues plaguing many Americans.

And with the Strait of Hormuz now part of the battlefield, every day the war goes on means higher prices across the globe. Indeed, commodities traders warn $100 a barrel prices are just around the corner. As for Trump, when he was asked by Reuters about spiking gasoline prices, he responded by saying "if they rise, they rise," and that the war is his priority. David E. Rovella  

What You Need to Know Today

Saudi Arabia, which according to the Washington Post joined Israel in urging Trump to attack, is now reaching out to Tehran to find an off-ramp. At the same time, influential voices in the United Arab Emirates are beginning to criticize Trump as Iran's retaliation continues, roiling the region's financial markets and economies. The UAE has been among Trump's staunchest allies, pledging about $1.4 trillion in investments and cultivating commercial ties with his family (which have raised allegations of unprecedented corruption).

That relationship, however, appears to have given Abu Dhabi little influence over the conflict. "Who gave you the authority to drag our region into a war with Iran? And on what basis did you make this dangerous decision?" Khalaf Al Habtoor, a Dubai billionaire and hotel tycoon, said in a post on social media.

Firemen and rescue workers inspect the site of an explosion at the Fairmont The Palm Hotel in Dubai on Feb. 28. Photographer: Altaf Qadri/AP

The Washington Post revealed Friday that the Kremlin is providing Iran with information on US military assets in the Gulf. Separately, new satellite images revealed Iran has managed to destroy a critical $300 million US radar system in what may be its most successful strike of the war. 

"These are scarce strategic resources," said Tom Karako, a missile defense expert with the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "Its loss is a huge blow." 

Also today, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the US may soon "unsanction" some Russian oil to free up supply. 

Iran War
Iran Destroys $300 Million US Radar Critical to Ballistic Missile Defense
The US has only eight THAAD systems globally, which cost about $1 billion each. The radar makes up about a third of that cost.

The Trump administration is continuing to push back on court orders tied to a Supreme Court ruling tossing out most of its tariffs. With US businesses looking for a $170 billion refund, a lower court judge tasked with implementing the high court ruling has jumped into the fray.

Judge Richard Eaton, who sits on the federal trade court in New York overseeing thousands of lawsuits seeking refunds, on Wednesday ordered the administration to remove Trump's emergency levies from its massive backlog of importers' paperwork. The judge said doing so would make future refunds easier, and he questioned why the government—which has slow-walked or failed to comply with many court orders—hadn't already stopped.

But on Friday, a US Customs and Border Protection official told Eaton the agency can't comply with his order to stop processing import duties. CBP instead said it was creating an automated refund system that may be ready in 45 days.

Markets Wrap
Stocks Continue Steep Decline Over War
The war, a weak jobs report and accelerating fears about private credit spelled a very bad end to a very bad week for Wall Street.

The US economic picture got darker on Friday. Unemployment rose back to 4.4% after grim February numbers and downward revisions painted a less-than-pleasant picture of America's labor market. Nonfarm payrolls fell 92,000 last month, one of the largest declines since the pandemic, after a strong start to the year, according to the Trump administration. While some of the downside was expected in advance, a wide array of industries cut jobs in the month.

The figures call into question whether the labor market is actually steadying—as Wall Street economists and Federal Reserve officials had hoped—after the worst year for hiring outside of a recession in decades.

"The idea the labor market has turned a corner implodes with this report," said Samuel Tombs, chief US economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.


More canaries with coaldust? BlackRock curbed withdrawals from one of its biggest private credit funds after client requests for redemptions spiked, the latest sign of investor anxiety about the $1.8 trillion private credit industry.

The firm's $26 billion HPS Corporate Lending Fund, one of the largest non-traded business development companies, said Friday that shareholders requested 9.3% of their shares, but management decided to cap the repurchases at 5%.

Earlier this week, Blackstone's flagship private credit fund fulfilled requests to tender a record 7.9% of shares, partly by having the firm and employees step in to offset some of the withdrawals. In January, Blue Owl Capital allowed investors in one of its technology-focused funds to cash in about $527 million of shares, or roughly 15% of the fund's net assets.

Market Warning
Private Debt Should Face 'Full-Blown Default Cycle,' Pimco Says
Concerns have intensified after corporate blowups raised concerns that direct-lending funds are too exposed to AI-vulnerable software firms.

With rising oil prices fueling inflation, investors are piling into US bond-market products that protect against such price moves—pushing some valuations to the highest levels in nearly a year.

The advance in oil prices has jacked up the US national average retail price of gasoline to about $3.32 on March 5 from just under $3 on March 1. Gasoline accounted for 2.9% of the US consumer price index in January.

For consumers, short-term inflation expectations are "largely driven by gasoline prices, just because they are so salient and most people see them on a pretty regular, weekly basis," said Omair Sharif, president of Inflation Insights.


Weekend Essay
How an Oil Crisis Becomes an Everything Crisis
The 1973 oil embargo showed how a shock to energy supplies can unravel economies, upend politics and make fear a force as powerful as war itself.

The Epstein Files
Ketamine, Prostitution and Money: Details of a Secret DEA Epstein Probe
A Department of Justice document combined with interviews reveal that a long-running investigation into organized crime led law enforcement to suspect the serial sex abuser of money laundering, distributing "club drugs" and operating a prostitution ring.

What You'll Need to Know Tomorrow

Iran War
Who's Who in Iran? Guide to the Islamic Republic's Power Players
Iran War
Gold Stuck in Dubai Is Being Sold at a Discount as War Widens
No Shelter
Wall Street's Diversification Strategy Can't Protect Investors From the Storm
Bloomberg Opinion
Kristi Noem's Abuses Went Deeper Than Photo Shoots
Bloomberg Opinion
The Native-Born Jobs Boom Was a Mirage
Artificial Intelligence
Oracle and OpenAI End Plans to Expand Flagship Data Center
Obsolescence
Anthropic Unveils Amazon-Inspired Marketplace for AI Software

For Your Commute

Technology
AI 'Man Camps' Offer Golf and Free Steaks to Lure Workers
As data centers boom, developers are rushing to build housing and amenities in remote locales. But not everyone is happy about it.

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Big Bear AI: Defense Giant With Trump Tailwinds?

Big Bear AI is a small-cap defense stock sitting at the crossroads of military intelligence, border security, and biometric technology, qu...