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Italian Foreign Minister: If The Middle East Crisis Continues, It Will Lead To An Increase In Migration
London Metal Exchange (LME): Tin Inventory Decreased By 25 Tons, Lead Inventory Decreased By 50 Tons, Zinc Inventory Decreased By 275 Tons, Nickel Inventory Decreased By 24 Tons, Aluminum Inventory Decreased By 2,225 Tons, And Copper Inventory Increased By 2,525 Tons
Iranian Media Released A Video Showing Iranian Armed Forces Commander-in-Chief Khatami Having A Video Call With The Operational Command. Khatami Instructed The Operational Command To Monitor "enemy Actions" With "the Highest Precision" In Order To Thwart Their Plans, Especially Ground Offensive Plans
According To Iran's Fars News Agency On The 2nd, An Israeli Hermes-900 Drone Was Successfully Intercepted And Destroyed By The Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' Air Defense System Over Shiraz, Iran
Trump Boasts "the Strongest" Economic Defense In History; Moody's Warns Shale Oil Is No Panacea
Ministry Of Commerce: Currently Accelerating The Domestic Ratification Process For The Protocol In Coordination With All ASEAN Member States
According To A Report By South Korea's Maeil Business Newspaper, Citing Unnamed Government Officials, South Korea Is Carefully Considering Whether To Pay Iran In Order To Secure Middle Eastern Oil And Gas Supplies
According To A Report By South Korea's Maeil Business Newspaper, Citing Unnamed Government Officials, South Korea Is Carefully Considering Whether To Pay Iran For Middle Eastern Oil And Gas Imports
Indonesia's Financial Services Regulator Is Optimistic That Indonesia Will Not Be Downgraded To A "frontier Market" By MSCI. Preliminary Confirmation Is Expected, Indicating That The Relevant Reforms Have Met The Requirements Of Index Providers
The China Earthquake Networks Center Officially Determined That A 4.7-magnitude Earthquake Occurred At 15:39 On April 2 In Toksun County, Turpan City, Xinjiang (43.21 Degrees North Latitude, 87.71 Degrees East Longitude), With A Focal Depth Of 25 Kilometers
French Finance Minister: We Expect To Announce A Series Of Policy Measures In The Coming Weeks That Will Facilitate The Establishment Of Data Centers In France
Market News: The European Union Is Discussing Establishing A Digital Technology Dialogue With The United States
Morocco's Ministry Of Energy Stated That The Country's Diesel Reserves Can Last For 51 Days, And Natural Gas And Coal Supplies Have Been Secured Until The End Of June
The China Earthquake Networks Center Automatically Determined That An Earthquake Of Approximately Magnitude 4.7 Occurred At 15:39 On April 2 Near Toksun County, Turpan City, Xinjiang (43.21 Degrees North Latitude, 87.73 Degrees East Longitude). The Final Result Is Subject To The Official Rapid Report

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We used to dread covering the monthly update of US government income and spending because, without fail, it would show that the USS Titanic was getting that much closer to the inevitable iceberg crash.
We used to dread covering the monthly update of US government income and spending because, without fail, it would show that the USS Titanic was getting that much closer to the inevitable iceberg crash. A few months ago, there was a glimmer of hope when thanks to Elon Musk and DOGE, there was a brief push to cut government spending, while at the same time the US also found a new revenue stream in the form of tariffs which helped reduce the massive monthly US deficit by a modest amount. Alas, in the grand scheme of things, the modest trim in spending and the bounce in revenue proved to be too little... and too late.
With that in mind, here is a look at the latest Treasury Income Statement for the month of August, published earlier today.First, the good news: for the fifth month in a row, the US government benefited from outsized tariff revenues, which as shown in the chart below, continue to rise and in August hit just under $30BN - or about $360BN annualized - at the current tariff rate.

But while the tariff revenue in June was sufficient to tip the overall US Treasury budget into a (very rare) surplus, July proved to be too great an obstacle as we discussed last month. And August was just a full-blown return to the disastrous drunken-sailor spending ways of old.According to the latest Monthly Treasury Statement, in August the US government spent $689 billion, up 0.4% from the $686.6 billion a year ago, and the highest monthly spending total of fiscal 2025 which ends next month. So much for the cost-cutting efforts of DOGE.

And while the huge monthly spending was somewhat offset by a 12.3% increase in revenues, which increased from $306.5 billion to $344.3 billion, this included the $29.5 billion in tariff revenues noted above. Take that out and government income would have been flat YoY.

Combining the latest receipts and spending data, and we get an August deficit of $345 billion, a substantial deterioration from the $291 billion deficit in July, and the highest monthly deficit of calendar 2025. It was also the second worst August deficit in US history, with just last year's pre-election blowout of $380 billion higher, which as readers will recall, was a kitchen sink month for the Biden admin, which flooded the economy in a last-ditch effort of boosting the economy ahead of the presidential elections.

Looking at the deficit on a cumulative basis, we find that after June's improvement, the deficit took another lunge in the past two months, and in August - just one months before the fiscal year end - it hit $1.974 trillion, up 4% from the $1.897 trillion a year ago. That means that with just one month to go, 2025 is shaping up as the third worst year in US history for the budget deficit, with just the covid years 2020 and 2021, worse.

Last but not least, the epic disaster that is US gross interest spending continues to rise, and in August the US spent $111.5 billion on interest, pushing the total for the eleven months of the fiscal year to a record $1,124 trillion, and on pace to surpass $1.2 trillion for the full year.

With total debt rising by about $1 trillion every 100 days, it means that interest will keep growing too, and unless revenue grows in line, we will reach a point where every taxed dollar goes to pay down US debt. As of today, interest expense eats up just over 23% of all government tax revenues, just shy of the non-wartime record high.

It also means that, as we first showed over a year ago, gross interest remains the second highest spending category for the US, well above defense, income security and health spending, and only Social Security remains a larger outlay category (although it is unclear for how much longer).

Bottom line: after a brief period of irrational hope in early 2025 when Musk's obsession with DOGE and cutting spending, we are again at square zero one and back on the fast-track to the debt-death of the United States. No wonder why in his most recent public commentary, Musk fully agrees with us: the government is unfixable.
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