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The world is on fire. Why are markets so calm?

It’s a fascinating moment for world politics and global markets. Geopolitically, the world is in turmoil, primarily because the United States, still the superpower, has become a fundamentally unreliable actor. President Donald Trump is actively pulling apart the international order that Washington built and led over the past 80 years. Yet, financial markets are riding high – in the US, East Asia, South America, and much of Europe.

Are investors wrong? Or is the picture more complex? There are three prime forces that will shape the next several years for global politics and markets.

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What’s Good Wednesday: June 3, 2026

Go to: A baseball game. In case you hadn’t heard, there are a lot of big sporting events this week. The Knicks play the Spurs in the NBA Finals, the French Open tennis tournament reaches its climax on Tuesday, and the World Cup gets going next week. But if you want to attend a sports game in person for a reasonable price, why not try your local baseball team? No, the sport isn’t quite as exciting as soccer or basketball, nor does it have the modern-day attraction of tennis, but it’s an excellent summer game to attend with a few friends. What’s better than watching batters try to whack a round ball, traveling at them at 100 mph, with nothing more than a round bat, all for a rather low price? Plus, there’s a fun sing-along towards the end of the game. – Zac

Watch: If watching live sports from the nosebleeds isn’t your thing (sorry, Zac), there’s no better time to park yourself on a comfy couch and watch a documentary about the King of Clay, Rafael Nadal. Netflix just released “Rafa,” a four-part series chronicling the life and career of the 14-time French Open champion. The show follows him through his final year on tour in 2024, as decades of training begin to take their toll and the full scope of his injuries and challenges comes into focus. Just wait until you see the shot of his foot, an issue that has plagued him since early in his career. And if you’re craving even more tennis once you finish the series, flip over to this year’s French Open, which enters the quarterfinals today. – Will

Read: The Skies Are Blue and Orange,” by iconic filmmaker Spike Lee. To keep the sports theme of our recommendations going, I’m throwing in an essay by one of Da New York Knicks’ most famous fans ahead of their finals game tonight. – Natalie J.

Cuba’s old guard gets even older

Raúl Castro, younger brother of Fidel, has been synonymous with the Cuban regime that has frustrated and confounded American presidents for decades. Though he stepped back from official duties in 2021, he continues to serve as a symbolic leader and as the general of Cuba’s Revolutionary Armed Forces. But Castro is ringing in his birthday with an unwelcome present from the US. Late last month, the US Justice Department charged him with murder in connection with the 1996 downing of a civilian aircraft near the Caribbean island. The charges come amid the Trump administration's broader effort this year to squeeze the communist regime through a mix of sanctions and a de facto blockade on its oil shipments.

South Korea’s Lee wins big in local election, Bolivia’s domestic crisis deepens, White House goes back to tariff policy

A superb day for South Korea’s Lee

President Lee Jae-myung is set to mark his one-year anniversary in office with an excellent showing in Wednesday’s local elections that were viewed as a referendum on his presidency. Exit polls suggest that his left-leaning Democratic Party is set to win 11 of 16 municipal leadership races, while the conservative People Power Party (PPP) will win just one. The remaining four are too close to call. It’s a remarkable turnaround from four years ago, when the PPP won the majority of those contests. It was in 2024 when the political ground started to shake, as then-President Yoon Suk Yeol of the PPP took the ill-fated step of imposing martial law. He was soon impeached, then sentenced to life in prison. Lee’s surging popularity has foreign policy ramifications: the president has sought to boost relations with China and North Korea while maintaining ties with Japan. With yesterday’s results, that approach will likely continue.

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Preserving presidential history for America’s 250th

As America approaches its 250th anniversary, Bank of America is investing in the legacy of leadership — committing $5M to the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library and conserving 110 presidential portraits at the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, so the history of leaders who defined our nation is preserved for generations to come.

Learn more here.

Walmart’s $1 billion investment is strengthening associate careers

Chris, an Army veteran, started his Walmart journey over 25 years ago as an hourly associate. Today, he manages a Distribution Center and serves as a mentor, helping others navigate their own paths to success. At Walmart, associates have the opportunity to take advantage of the pathways, perks, and pay that come with the job — with or without a college degree. In fact, more than 75% of Walmart management started as hourly associates. Learn more about how over 130,000 associates were promoted into roles of greater responsibility and higher pay in FY25.

In this "ask ian," Ian Bremmer breaks down President Trump’s approach to the 2026 midterm elections and what his political strategy may look like afterward.

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Last week, Microsoft released a new report offering an in-depth look at AI adoption across the United States, with state- and county-level insights for the first time. While more than 30 percent of working-age Americans now use AI tools, adoption remains uneven across regions, with significantly higher usage in urban areas and communities tied to universities. The findings point to a broader challenge: without stronger access to infrastructure, skills, and education, AI’s benefits risk remaining concentrated rather than broadly shared.

Read the full blog here.

The maker of the large-language model Claude became the latest AI giant to file to go public, following a similar move by SpaceX. OpenAI is likely to follow suit. Anthropic’s market debut could arrive as soon as this fall. It’s not clear, though, how many shares it will offer to the public, but the IPO is set to make the company worth above $1 trillion. Separately, Anthropic on Tuesday announced it will expand access to its powerful Mythos model to another 150 organizations in 15 countries, allowing those groups to beef up their cyber defenses ahead of a broader release of the model.

Proposed US Ebola center in Kenya piles pressure on President Ruto

Hundreds protested in Kenya on Monday after the US announced it was establishing an Ebola quarantine center on the Laikipia Air Base, about 120 miles from the capital Nairobi. The facility will be exclusively used to house US citizens exposed to Ebola while traveling in other countries. The protests even turned fatal, with two people shot dead (the circumstances remain unclear). Kenyan President William Ruto defended the plan yesterday, insisting that the center would ultimately strengthen Kenya’s preparedness for future outbreaks, while also citing the US’s past support of health initiatives in the country. Protesters remain unconvinced, saying the facility increases the risk of introducing Ebola into a country that has not recorded any cases of the disease. The Kenyan High Court last week ordered construction on the facility to pause, but Ruto will still support the plan, putting him at odds with protesters ahead of next year’s election.

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Just two days after NASA unveiled plans for a permanent base near the Moon’s south pole, Blue Origin – one of the private companies hired to be part of the project – suffered a spectacular setback. On May 28, the Jeff Bezos-owned company’s test rocket exploded in Florida, badly damaging its launchpad, which could take years to repair. No one was injured, but the failure brought the company’s lofty ambitions and plans for the first-ever privately funded lunar landing mission crashing down to Earth.

For NASA, the incident means mission delays, but for Blue Origin’s chief competitor, Elon Musk’s SpaceX, it could mean opportunity. SpaceX could potentially debut on the Nasdaq exchange as early as June 12 and is expected to raise $75 billion, with a company valuation of roughly $1.8 trillion. SpaceX could leverage this capital to develop new and better technology – and dominate the US space tech market.

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In his latest Quick Take, Ian Bremmer says the Iran war has left the global economy paying a steep price while delivering few of the outcomes the Trump administration promised. But it may have one unintended consequence: accelerating the transition away from fossil fuels.

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Twenty-five years ago this spring, the Netherlands became the first country to legalize same-sex marriage. It was a watershed moment, one that spurred 37 other countries to follow suit in the years since, including Thailand and Liechtenstein most recently in 2025.

Despite that progress, same-sex marriage remains illegal in far more places than it is legal. It’s banned in nearly 100 countries, while same-sex relationships between consenting adults are criminalized in 65. Most of those countries are in Africa and Asia, though some are in the Americas, including Jamaica.

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Right-wing populist, leftist leader advance to Colombian presidential runoff

Far-right candidate Abelardo de la Espriella won the first round of Colombia’s presidential election yesterday with 43.7%, besting left-wing Senator Ivan Cepeda, who finished with 40.9%. Because neither cleared the 50% threshold, the two will lock horns in a head-to-head runoff on June 21 to decide who will succeed the country’s first left-wing leader, Gustavo Petro. Until a few weeks ago, de la Espriella had been expected to finish third (and thus miss the runoff), but his sharp focus on security amid the country’s surging levels of violence, as well as his online theatrics — which helped him gain a far larger social media following than his rivals — propelled him to a first-round win. He’s now well-positioned to help Latin America’s right maintain its winning streak. Expect a heated three weeks ahead: Cepeda questioned the first-round results, while Petro outright rejected them.

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