Scored 90 articles from 84 feeds; 15 included in digest.
Run ID: run-1781940410804
Generated: June 20, 2026 at 03:32 AM ET
Summaries: claude-sonnet-4-6; enrichment 15/15 succeeded
| Source | Type | Included | Scored | 28d Digest Rate | 28d Avg Score | 28d Hotlist Hit | 7d Article Age | 28d Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NYT front page | news | 3 | 12 | 4% | 0.08 | 0% | 5.4h | Stable |
| MyFT | news | 3 | 10 | 21% | 0.25 | 1% | 6.0h | Stable |
| Bloomberg Markets | news | 3 | 8 | 13% | 0.27 | 1% | 3.6h | Stable |
| Guardian | news | 2 | 25 | 7% | 0.06 | 0% | 8.8h | Stable |
| WSJ Tech | news | 2 | 3 | 9% | 0.11 | 0% | 6.1h | Stable |
| WSJ Social Economy | news | 1 | 2 | 59% | 0.45 | 0% | 5.2h | Stable |
| Seeking Alpha News | commentary | 1 | 1 | 24% | 0.16 | 1% | 1.1h | Stable |
| Hacker News | commentary | 0 | 22 | 2% | 0.05 | 0% | 8.8h | Stable |
| WSJ US Business | news | 0 | 3 | 7% | 0.11 | 0% | 6.9h | Stable |
| Daring Fireball | commentary | 0 | 2 | ~1% | ~0.06 | ~0% | 4.7h | Low sample |
| The Atlantic | news | 0 | 1 | 2% | 0.06 | 0% | 6.7h | Stable |
| Tom’s Hardware | news | 0 | 1 | 3% | 0.06 | 0% | 7.6h | Stable |
Source: NYT front page
Type: news
Included: 3
Scored: 12
28d Digest Rate: 4%
28d Avg Score: 0.08
28d Hotlist Hit: 0%
7d Article Age: 5.4h
28d Confidence: Stable
Source: MyFT
Type: news
Included: 3
Scored: 10
28d Digest Rate: 21%
28d Avg Score: 0.25
28d Hotlist Hit: 1%
7d Article Age: 6.0h
28d Confidence: Stable
Source: Bloomberg Markets
Type: news
Included: 3
Scored: 8
28d Digest Rate: 13%
28d Avg Score: 0.27
28d Hotlist Hit: 1%
7d Article Age: 3.6h
28d Confidence: Stable
Source: Guardian
Type: news
Included: 2
Scored: 25
28d Digest Rate: 7%
28d Avg Score: 0.06
28d Hotlist Hit: 0%
7d Article Age: 8.8h
28d Confidence: Stable
Source: WSJ Tech
Type: news
Included: 2
Scored: 3
28d Digest Rate: 9%
28d Avg Score: 0.11
28d Hotlist Hit: 0%
7d Article Age: 6.1h
28d Confidence: Stable
Source: WSJ Social Economy
Type: news
Included: 1
Scored: 2
28d Digest Rate: 59%
28d Avg Score: 0.45
28d Hotlist Hit: 0%
7d Article Age: 5.2h
28d Confidence: Stable
Source: Seeking Alpha News
Type: commentary
Included: 1
Scored: 1
28d Digest Rate: 24%
28d Avg Score: 0.16
28d Hotlist Hit: 1%
7d Article Age: 1.1h
28d Confidence: Stable
Source: Hacker News
Type: commentary
Included: 0
Scored: 22
28d Digest Rate: 2%
28d Avg Score: 0.05
28d Hotlist Hit: 0%
7d Article Age: 8.8h
28d Confidence: Stable
Source: WSJ US Business
Type: news
Included: 0
Scored: 3
28d Digest Rate: 7%
28d Avg Score: 0.11
28d Hotlist Hit: 0%
7d Article Age: 6.9h
28d Confidence: Stable
Source: Daring Fireball
Type: commentary
Included: 0
Scored: 2
28d Digest Rate: ~1%
28d Avg Score: ~0.06
28d Hotlist Hit: ~0%
7d Article Age: 4.7h
28d Confidence: Low sample
Source: The Atlantic
Type: news
Included: 0
Scored: 1
28d Digest Rate: 2%
28d Avg Score: 0.06
28d Hotlist Hit: 0%
7d Article Age: 6.7h
28d Confidence: Stable
Source: Tom’s Hardware
Type: news
Included: 0
Scored: 1
28d Digest Rate: 3%
28d Avg Score: 0.06
28d Hotlist Hit: 0%
7d Article Age: 7.6h
28d Confidence: Stable
This Bloomberg Markets article, published in Japanese, presents a curated weekly news digest highlighting five major stories. According to the headline and brief introductory text, the topics include a US-Iran peace agreement, the Bank of Japan raising its interest rate to 1%, and the Tokyo Stock Exchange closing above 70,000 for the first time. The introduction characterizes the week as one in which both international politics and financial markets entered new phases. The full details of each of the five selected stories are not included in the supplied article text.
Keywords: Bank of Japan, interest rate increase, monetary policy, Tokyo Stock Exchange, asset valuations, financial markets, yield changes, US-Iran relations
The Financial Times article, filed under US equities, argues that financial markets have learned to read President Trump's behavior: when early signs emerge that he is backing down from an unorthodox foreign policy decision, that is the moment for market participants to act. The available article text is limited, so further detail on the piece's specific arguments or data cannot be determined.
Keywords: US equities, policy uncertainty, market positioning, foreign policy, investor sentiment
A Bloomberg Markets article examines Germany's Schuldschein debt market, using the KTM AG insolvency case as an illustration of emerging risks for lenders in this niche segment. When KTM presented an insolvency plan to creditors, a counter-proposal discussion drew more than 100 parties — including backers from small German towns, Chinese banks, and European pension funds — rather than typical large corporate lenders. The article suggests this diverse and fragmented creditor base, with varying levels of familiarity with the case, may signal that the market can no longer be considered a reliable safe haven for lenders.
Keywords: KTM AG, insolvency, Mittelstandsanleihen, SME bonds, corporate debt, creditor coordination, German debt market, retail investors, pension funds, credit restructuring
The article, published by the Financial Times, argues that European stocks stand to benefit more than their US counterparts from a potential 'peace dividend' — specifically, the prospect of easing energy shortages that have resulted from conflict involving Iran. The piece suggests that European companies have greater recovery upside should energy supply conditions improve, implying that the energy disruption has weighed more heavily on European equities than on US ones.
Keywords: European stocks, US equities, energy prices, geopolitical risk, asset valuations, Iran conflict
European stocks are positioned for a strong second half of the year, as the prospect of peace in the Middle East leads investors to anticipate stronger economic growth and easing inflation, reducing stagflation risks.
Keywords: European stocks, stagflation, economic growth, inflation, geopolitical risk, investor sentiment, equity markets
In California's June election, voters rejected more local tax measures than usual, a trend the article attributes to residents feeling financial pressure from rising costs.
Keywords: California voters, tax measures, cost of living, household finances, voter behavior
According to a Wall Street Journal report, Jane Street, a secretive Wall Street firm, is gaining attention in the AI space. The firm has grown from a small staff to 3,500 employees and plans to hire more than 500 additional workers this year.
Keywords: Jane Street, proprietary trading, market-making, AI talent, hiring expansion, fintech recruitment
Rathbones, a UK wealth manager, saw its stock fall 17% after an internal review found regulatory compliance shortcomings. According to the article, this development has benefited banks competing for wealthy UK clients, with Rathbones' difficulties potentially creating an opening for rival institutions in that market.
Keywords: Rathbones, wealth management, regulatory compliance, UK banks, stock price decline
A New York Times report states that Lebanon has become a weak link in efforts to reach a U.S.-Iran deal to end the war. The article notes that the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, once considered a secondary front to the broader American-Israeli war on Iran, has emerged as one of the main obstacles to ending it.
Keywords: Lebanon, Hezbollah, Israel, Iran, U.S. foreign policy, geopolitical conflict, peace negotiations
The Guardian marks ten years since the UK's Brexit referendum by examining five emblematic topics—Nissan's Sunderland factory, the fishing industry, blue passports, social care workers, and the City of London—to assess how the reality of Brexit compared with the rhetoric of the 2016 campaign. On manufacturing, the article notes that Nissan's Sunderland plant produced 507,000 cars in 2016 but only 273,000 last year, with the factory now in talks over a potential partnership with Chinese manufacturer Chery. The fishing industry, which voted overwhelmingly for Leave, saw its expectations largely disappointed: Boris Johnson's 2020 deal allowed EU boats to continue fishing close to UK shores, and Keir Starmer subsequently extended EU vessel access to 2038. UK seafood imports (£4.1bn) now dwarf exports (£2bn). On travel, the article describes how the reintroduction of blue passports has come alongside greater friction at EU borders, including the rollout of the EU's entry-exit biometric system and a forthcoming €20 travel authorisation fee. Demand for Irish passports has risen 2,500% since before the referendum. In social care, EU worker recruitment collapsed after the vote, pushing vacancies from 78,000 in 2016–17 to 132,000 five years later. A subsequent visa scheme drew large numbers of non-EU workers, but successive governments have since tightened those rules as well, leaving the sector again short-staffed. For the City of London, early fears of mass job losses proved overstated: EY's last Brexit tracker recorded roughly 7,000 jobs moved to the continent, against earlier estimates of tens of thousands, and around 1.1 million people remain employed in UK financial services.
Keywords: Brexit, UK-EU relations, referendum, political legacy, economic consequences
A Wall Street Journal poll finds that financial anxiety about personal security and the prospects for the next generation is not limited to lower-income Americans, but extends to the wealthiest households as well. According to the poll, even high-income respondents express concern that the political and economic systems are working against them.
Keywords: wealth inequality, consumer sentiment, economic anxiety, financial security concerns, poll data
This opinion piece contrasts how two neighboring Virginia counties have approached AI data center development. Loudoun County has welcomed data centers and experienced economic prosperity as a result, while Prince William County has taken a more resistant, NIMBY-oriented stance toward such facilities.
Keywords: AI data centers, Loudoun County, Prince William County, zoning policy, economic development, local government, infrastructure investment
In a Guardian opinion column, Nathalie Tocci argues that despite widespread characterisation of the current era as governed by the 'law of the jungle,' recent conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East suggest that even militarily dominant powers have not achieved their aims. She notes that Russia has not subdued Ukraine, and that the US-Israel military campaign against Iran ended with a memorandum of understanding that effectively recognised Iranian control of the Strait of Hormuz rather than toppling the Iranian government. Tocci examines two European initiatives as potential signs of a renewed commitment to international law. The first is a roughly 40-country coalition led by France and the UK to clear mines from the Strait of Hormuz, though she considers it unlikely to proceed given US indifference and Iranian opposition. The second, which she describes as more substantive, involves Norway providing legal counsel to Iran, Oman, Pakistan, and Qatar to ensure post-strait arrangements comply with the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. On the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Tocci criticises European governments for failing to hold Israel accountable for what she describes as war crimes, crimes against humanity, and possibly genocide in Gaza. She notes that EU sanctions on individual Israeli ministers are unlikely given the unanimity requirement, but argues that banning imports from illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank would require only a qualified majority and has the support of a majority of member states. She reports that EU High Representative Kaja Kallas has formally requested a Commission proposal on the matter.
Keywords: geopolitics, international law, Ukraine, Iran, military conflict, rules-based order, global rupture
A preliminary Iran deal reached by the Trump administration has encountered significant difficulties within its first week, according to the New York Times. The early agreement has generated confusion, including the cancellation of a planned Swiss signing ceremony, tensions with Israel and Congress, and uncertainty surrounding follow-on negotiations.
Keywords: Iran deal, Trump administration, U.S. foreign policy, Israel relations, Congress, Diplomacy
A government audit has found that First Quantum's Cobre Panama mine is broadly compliant, according to a report from Seeking Alpha News.
Keywords: First Quantum Minerals, Cobre Panama mine, regulatory compliance, government audit, mining operations