Business
USDA forecasts farm trade deficit to fall to $29 billion in fiscal year 2026
Under Secretary of Agriculture for Trade and Foreign Agricultural Affairs Luke Lindberg says the U.S. agricultural trade deficit fell from $50 billion to $29 billion in one year.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) recently released a trade forecast showing the farm trade gap narrowing significantly during fiscal year (FY) 2026. The forecast shows the agricultural trade deficit falling from $43.7 billion in FY2025 to a projected $29 billion in FY2026, an improvement from last year’s level and the $37 billion that was projected in December 2025.
Under Secretary of Agriculture for Trade and Foreign Agricultural Affairs Luke Lindberg told Fox News Digital that while the gap tightening was a step in the right direction, the USDA is still working to get back to a surplus.
“American farmers and ranchers have historically exported vastly more than we’ve imported, including in President Trump’s first term, and we had an agricultural trade surplus,” Lindberg said.
“Unfortunately, in the four years under President Biden, we ended up with a $50 billion agricultural trade deficit forecast that his team forecasted right before he left office just about a year ago. Now today, we’re excited to be announcing that we’ve reduced that deficit to $29 billion. Now, we’re still on course, and we need to get back to a surplus, that’s the goal, but a 43% reduction in one year, it’s a great start,” he added.
BEEF PRICES IN FOCUS AS TRUMP SIGNS ORDER AIMED AT CONSUMER RELIEF

A soybean farmer drives his truck on a country road near his family’s farm in Cordova, Maryland, on Oct. 10, 2025. (Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)
In order to return the U.S. to that surplus, the USDA is taking action, which Lindberg outlined as a three-step process: securing strong trade agreements that open markets for American farmers and ranchers, building buyer-seller relationships in those markets and holding trading partners accountable to the commitments they make.
The under secretary said that he is more optimistic than what the forecast articulates because of the “historic” trade deals that President Donald Trump has been able to secure. Lindberg said he believes the agreements have allowed U.S. farmers and ranchers to compete on a leveled playing field.
“I think the more that we can take advantage of the agreements the president has signed, the more we are going to see this number get even better from a trade deficit perspective,” Lindberg told Fox News Digital. “I’m excited to see how our producers take advantage of that access and significantly increased opportunities.”
Lindberg spoke about the opening of Malaysia’s market as an example of a market that was recently opened to U.S. farmers and ranchers. He said that during his visit to Malaysia, it was “very clear” that people wanted to buy American products. He said that buyers abroad trust American products to be safe and high-quality.
The under secretary recalled meeting a restaurateur in Malaysia who invested her own money in a processing plant in the U.S. so she could be the first one to have American beef in her restaurant.
“Those are the kinds of investments and forward-leaning conversations we’re having with buyers in these countries all around the world,” he said.

Cattle are seen on a farm in Jamestown, Calif., on Oct. 26, 2025. (Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)
While the administration has emphasized opening foreign markets, Lindberg said the impact could also be felt closer to home as U.S. farmers and ranchers supply more of the food Americans consume.
Beyond the narrowing trade gap, Lindberg said Americans could also see changes at the grocery store. He pointed to a projected decline in agricultural imports, including fruits and vegetables, and argued that increased domestic production could reduce the U.S.’s reliance on foreign suppliers.
“Producing things locally, lower transit costs, all of that combines to get to what the president’s goal and objective has been, which is reducing prices at the grocery store shelves,” he said.

A worker uses a tractor to plant soybeans at Double G Angus Farms in Tiffin, Iowa, on Tuesday, May 6, 2025. (Benjamin Roberts/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
While the U.S. remains in a trade deficit, Lindberg said the narrowing gap signals progress toward the agricultural trade surplus that American farmers and ranchers have seen in previous years.
Business
USDA provides relief to sugar producers

Financial program to help sugar producers as they think about 2026 planting intentions.
Business
Ellington Residential Mortgage earnings missed by $0.04, revenue topped estimates

Ellington Residential Mortgage earnings missed by $0.04, revenue topped estimates
Business
Alto Ingredients stock surges 25% on surprise fourth quarter profit

Alto Ingredients stock surges 25% on surprise fourth quarter profit
Business
Systm Foods adds clear protein beverages

The beverages feature 20 grams of whey protein.
Business
Versant Media Prepares for Growth Despite 2025 Revenue Weakness
Versant Media VSNT 5.91%increase; green up pointing triangle Group said profit and revenue fell in 2025, hurt by lower revenue across its linear distribution, advertising and content-licensing businesses.
Still, Chief Executive Mark Lazarus said the company is well positioned to grow in the year ahead after spending much of the past year strengthening its programming, expanding its audience, growing its platforms businesses and successfully establishing itself as a standalone company.
Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
Business
Flowers sets new leadership for Simple Mills

Michelle Lorge named president, taking reins from founder Katlin Smith.
Business
Sabre completes redemption of $91.6 million in senior secured notes

Sabre completes redemption of $91.6 million in senior secured notes
Business
SanDisk Corporation Shares Surge in Volatile Trading Amid AI Memory Demand
SanDisk Corporation (NASDAQ: SNDK) stock experienced sharp fluctuations in recent sessions, reflecting broader market dynamics in the semiconductor sector driven by artificial intelligence infrastructure needs and geopolitical uncertainties.

As of midday trading on March 4, 2026, SanDisk shares were trading around $599, up approximately 6% from the previous close of $565.41. The stock opened higher at about $586.84, reaching an intraday high near $607 before moderating. Volume exceeded 9 million shares, well above average, signaling strong investor interest.
The previous session on March 3 saw a steep decline of 8.67%, closing at $565.41 after dropping from a prior level around $619. Analysts attributed the pullback partly to broader tech sector pressure from rising energy costs and tensions in the Middle East, which impacted memory chip players including SanDisk and rival Micron Technology.
SanDisk, a leading provider of NAND flash memory and storage solutions, has emerged as a standalone public company following its separation from Western Digital Corporation in February 2025. The spin-off positioned SanDisk to capitalize directly on surging demand for high-performance memory in AI data centers, enterprise storage and consumer devices.
The company’s fiscal second-quarter results, reported in late January 2026, exceeded expectations significantly. Revenue reached $3.03 billion, up 31% sequentially and 61% year-over-year. GAAP net income stood at $803 million, reflecting robust gross margins that climbed to over 51% from under 30% in the prior quarter.
Guidance for the third quarter pointed to revenue between $4.4 billion and $4.8 billion, with earnings per share projected at $12 to $14. Management highlighted sustained pricing strength in NAND flash, driven by constrained supply and AI-related demand that shows no signs of easing.
“AI workloads are elevating NAND’s role in performance-critical applications,” one analyst noted in a recent client update, emphasizing potential for continued pricing momentum through 2026 and into 2027. Industry observers point to supply agreements extending to 2028 as evidence that customers are locking in capacity amid shortages.
SanDisk’s stock has delivered extraordinary returns since the spin-off. Year-to-date in 2026, shares have gained substantially, building on a more than 1,200% surge over the past 12 months in some measurements. The 52-week range spans a low of $27.89 to a high of $725, underscoring the volatility tied to memory cycle dynamics and AI hype.
Recent corporate actions have also influenced trading. In February 2026, Western Digital announced plans to sell a portion of its remaining stake in SanDisk through a secondary offering valued at around $3.09 billion to $3.17 billion. The move aimed to reduce debt but introduced temporary selling pressure. Despite this, shares rebounded in subsequent sessions as investors focused on underlying fundamentals.
Analyst sentiment remains largely positive, with a consensus “Moderate Buy” rating. Price targets vary widely, from lows around $300 to highs exceeding $1,000, with averages hovering near current levels or higher. Firms have raised targets recently, citing SanDisk’s positioning in AI infrastructure compared to peers.
Comparisons to competitors like Micron highlight sector trends. Both companies have benefited from NAND and DRAM price increases, though SanDisk’s focus on NAND has given it an edge in certain AI applications. However, risks persist, including potential oversupply if demand moderates, geopolitical disruptions affecting supply chains, and high valuations that leave little room for error.
Market capitalization stands at approximately $88 billion, reflecting the company’s rapid revaluation post-spin-off. Shares outstanding total about 147.6 million.
Investors continue to monitor upcoming catalysts, including participation in investor conferences and any updates on capacity expansions or partnerships. While memory stocks face periodic digestion phases, current indicators suggest SanDisk remains well-positioned amid the ongoing AI buildout.
The stock’s performance illustrates the high-stakes nature of the semiconductor industry in 2026, where innovation in storage technology intersects with massive capital spending on data centers. As AI adoption accelerates, companies like SanDisk could see extended cycles of strong demand, though volatility is likely to remain a feature.
Business
Programmatic Risk Management for Derivative Trading
Leverage makes derivatives exciting for traders but unforgiving for the systems that manage them. A few ticks against a position can quickly drain margin, so developers treat risk as a real-time engine rather than a background task.
When algorithms run across markets or overnight, code must continuously defend the account, catching issues before the exchange or broker does. This article outlines how to embed protections into trading architecture using live data flows, automated rules, and safeguards that keep exposure controlled even when markets turn volatile.
Understanding Leverage Risk in Derivatives
Anyone working with futures, options, or CFDs knows how quickly notional exposure multiplies. Under UK and ESMA rules, leverage caps help, but even at those levels, a mild move in the underlying can create a sharp swing in account equity. Systems often fail when correlated instruments start moving together, or volatility jumps unexpectedly. In that environment, relying on manual oversight is a luxury you simply do not have.
Programmatic controls act as your first responder, enforcing boundaries the moment conditions drift beyond safe limits. This is just as relevant for spread betting, where leveraged exposure behaves similarly to CFDs and can accelerate both gains and losses if not tightly managed by automated risk logic.
Position Sizing as a Coded Constraint
Good risk engineering starts with sizing. Instead of letting strategies submit any quantity they like, you define exactly how size is calculated and make every order pass through that logic. Many teams use a mixture of equity, volatility, and margin requirements to determine exposure, shrinking sizes when markets heat up or when the account approaches internal leverage ceilings. The rule is in code, so it behaves consistently across strategies, timeframes, and asset classes. It also prevents the classic failure mode where a single miscalculated signal submits a position ten times larger than intended.
Volatility Adjusted Exposure and Automated Stop Logic
Stops are the structural supports of any derivatives strategy. Rather than adding them after a fill, a safer approach is to require them at order creation. The key is setting distances that reflect market conditions. Volatility-adjusted stops help place levels where the market expects them, while trailing stops add protection by moving with the price to lock in profit.
Real-Time Margin Monitoring and Liquidation Rules
Margin can deteriorate sharply, especially during overlapping market hours. To avoid falling into ESMA’s 50 per cent margin close-out zone, a risk engine needs to keep a live view of margin usage and equity. Systems commonly implement multiple stages of defence—early warnings, partial trading restrictions, and finally deterministic liquidation if thresholds are breached. The important part is that liquidation rules are transparent. Whether your logic closes the largest positions first or trims proportionally across the board, your team should be able to replay the behaviour in backtests and see exactly why the system reacted the way it did.
Streaming VaR and Real-Time Risk Metrics
While position and margin rules operate at the micro level, VaR offers a wider lens on risk. For real-time applications, a lightweight parametric VaR is usually enough. It can run every second if needed, capturing how the live portfolio responds to shifting volatility and correlations. When VaR breaches a preset share of equity, the system can automatically block new exposure or scale positions down. For more nuanced insights, Conditional VaR or stress-based metrics can run on slower intervals, adding depth without overloading compute resources.
Aggregating Portfolio Level Exposure
A portfolio can look safe on a position-by-position basis and still carry dangerous concentration. Developers often discover this when two independent strategies accidentally lean in the same direction. Mapping instruments to risk factors helps surface these hidden pressures. Equity index futures tie into beta; rate products carry duration; FX pairs contribute directional exposure. By summing exposure across these factors, the system can spot when investment themes are unintentionally stacking up. Once limits are defined, the risk layer automatically enforces them, reshaping or rejecting orders that would push the portfolio beyond comfort.
Stress Testing and Scenario Simulation
Stress testing introduces a different kind of thinking. Instead of asking “What is happening right now?” it asks “What would happen if things suddenly changed?” Developers typically run scenarios where markets gap down, volatility leaps, or rates shift abruptly. It is even more illuminating to run historical scenarios like the 2016 sterling flash crash or the extreme volatility clusters in 2020. If projected losses exceed policy limits, the system raises flags or automatically reduces leverage. These checks help ensure the portfolio will survive situations that are rare but absolutely possible.
Circuit Breakers and Kill Switch Mechanisms
Every robust trading architecture includes a way to say “stop everything.” Circuit breakers handle unusual states: repeated margin warnings, abnormal slippage, or conflicting data streams. When triggered, they pause trading or flatten positions until a human reviews the situation. In the UK retail derivatives environment, these features also satisfy regulatory expectations around client protection and system resilience. A kill switch is simple in idea but powerful in practice; it prevents a momentary glitch from cascading into a major loss.
Integrating Regulatory Context Into System Design
FCA and ESMA rules aren’t constraints to bolt on at the end. They shape how your architecture must behave. Retail accounts require negative balance protection, stricter leverage caps, and mandatory close-out thresholds. Institutional accounts offer more flexibility but still demand that risk monitoring is demonstrably robust. Codifying these requirements ensures the engine behaves predictably regardless of market conditions or strategy design.
Embedding Risk Management as an Independent System Layer
When risk lives as a separate service rather than a feature embedded inside strategies, everything becomes easier, including testing, auditing, updating rules, and verifying behaviour. The risk layer continuously processes data and outputs constraints that the execution layer must obey. This separation mirrors good software design principles and prevents strategies from ever bypassing the protections that keep the account safe.
Final Thoughts
Programmatic risk management turns a derivative trading system from a reactive tool into a defensive, self-correcting engine. With position sizing, margin controls, VaR limits, stress tests, and circuit breakers working together, exposure becomes both measurable and manageable. For UK developers and fintech teams, this isn’t just best practice; it is essential for operating safely in a regulated, high-leverage environment. When built well, risk management becomes the silent architecture that keeps strategies alive long enough to prove themselves.
Business
Coinbase Global Shares Surge 15% as Bitcoin Rally and Regulatory Optimism Fuel Crypto Stock Gains
Coinbase Global, Inc. (NASDAQ: COIN) stock surged more than 15% in midday trading on March 4, 2026, leading gains among cryptocurrency-related equities as Bitcoin climbed above key levels and positive signals emerged from Washington on digital asset regulation.

As of approximately 12:00 p.m. EST, COIN shares traded at around $210, up $27.90 or 15.3% from the previous close of $182.36. The stock opened at $195.43, hit an intraday high near $210.74 and saw volume exceed 14 million shares, far above the average daily trading levels. The rally extended premarket momentum, where shares rose on reports of Bitcoin’s overnight advance.
The sharp move came amid a broader recovery in digital assets. Bitcoin rose roughly 4% in recent sessions, surpassing $71,000 in some measurements, driven by renewed institutional inflows into spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds and improving macroeconomic sentiment. Coinbase, as the largest U.S.-based cryptocurrency exchange, benefits directly from higher trading volumes and asset prices that boost transaction fees and user activity.
CEO Brian Armstrong reinforced optimism in recent statements, declaring that “the business of crypto has never been stronger.” The comment highlighted sustained user engagement and product expansion despite earlier volatility. Coinbase has diversified beyond pure trading, with growth in its Base layer-2 network, institutional services and international operations contributing to resilience.
Recent political developments added fuel to the rally. Reports indicated President Trump met privately with Armstrong and publicly urged banks to support pending cryptocurrency market structure legislation, including the CLARITY Act. The bill aims to provide clearer regulatory guidelines for digital assets, a long-standing priority for Coinbase and the industry. Armstrong visited the White House to discuss delays attributed to banking sector resistance. Investors interpreted the signals as increasing likelihood of favorable legislation under the current administration, reducing long-term uncertainty that has weighed on crypto stocks.
The surge contrasts with Coinbase’s recent earnings challenges. In its fourth-quarter 2025 results reported earlier in 2026, the company posted a surprise net loss of $667 million, snapping a streak of eight profitable quarters. Revenue declined 21.5% year-over-year amid a broad crypto selloff and lower trading volumes. The results missed analyst expectations, reflecting sensitivity to market cycles.
Despite the setback, analysts note Coinbase’s strategic positioning. The company has expanded its role in traditional finance, including 24-hour commission-free trading for certain securities and efforts to integrate more assets onto its platform. Base, its Ethereum layer-2 solution, continues to gain traction, though Armstrong acknowledged that some SocialFi features tested in the app “didn’t quite work” as planned.
Year-to-date in 2026, COIN shares have shown volatility but remain well above recent lows. The 52-week range spans $139.36 to $444.65, with the all-time high reached in July 2025 during a prior crypto bull phase. Market capitalization hovers near $54 billion, with approximately 223 million shares outstanding.
Analyst sentiment leans positive, with a consensus leaning toward “Buy” ratings. Average price targets sit around $250, implying upside from current levels, though forecasts range from $120 lows to $440 highs. Firms cite potential regulatory tailwinds, Bitcoin’s performance and Coinbase’s market dominance as key drivers.
Broader sector peers also advanced, with companies tied to crypto infrastructure and stablecoins participating in the upswing. The rally underscores the interconnected nature of crypto equities and underlying asset prices, where sentiment shifts rapidly based on macroeconomic factors, ETF flows and policy news.
Risks remain prominent. Crypto markets are notoriously cyclical, and any reversal in Bitcoin or regulatory setbacks could pressure shares. Coinbase faces ongoing scrutiny from regulators, though recent political engagement suggests improving relations. High valuation multiples leave the stock vulnerable to corrections if trading volumes soften again.
Investors continue watching for upcoming catalysts, including potential progress on the CLARITY Act, quarterly updates on user metrics and any announcements around new products or partnerships. As institutional adoption of digital assets grows and regulatory clarity potentially emerges, Coinbase appears positioned to capture significant market share in the evolving landscape.
The performance on March 4 illustrates the high-beta nature of crypto-linked stocks in 2026, where policy signals, asset price momentum and executive commentary can drive outsized daily moves. With Bitcoin stabilizing at higher levels and Washington showing renewed engagement, Coinbase’s trajectory may hinge on sustained momentum in both crypto markets and legislative progress.
-
Politics6 days agoITV enters Gaza with IDF amid ongoing genocide
-
Politics2 days agoAlan Cumming Brands Baftas Ceremony A ‘Triggering S**tshow’
-
Fashion5 days agoWeekend Open Thread: Iris Top
-
NewsBeat7 days agoCuba says its forces have killed four on US-registered speedboat | World News
-
Tech4 days agoUnihertz’s Titan 2 Elite Arrives Just as Physical Keyboards Refuse to Fade Away
-
Sports5 days ago
The Vikings Need a Duck
-
NewsBeat4 days agoDubai flights cancelled as Brit told airspace closed ’10 minutes after boarding’
-
NewsBeat7 days agoManchester Central Mosque issues statement as it imposes new measures ‘with immediate effect’ after armed men enter
-
NewsBeat3 days ago‘Significant’ damage to boarded-up Horden house after fire
-
NewsBeat4 days agoThe empty pub on busy Cambridge road that has been boarded up for years
-
NewsBeat4 days agoAbusive parents will now be treated like sex offenders and placed on a ‘child cruelty register’ | News UK
-
Entertainment3 days agoBaby Gear Guide: Strollers, Car Seats
-
Business7 days agoDiscord Pushes Implementation of Global Age Checks to Second Half of 2026
-
Tech5 days agoNASA Reveals Identity of Astronaut Who Suffered Medical Incident Aboard ISS
-
Business6 days agoOnly 4% of women globally reside in countries that offer almost complete legal equality
-
NewsBeat4 days agoEmirates confirms when flights will resume amid Dubai airport chaos
-
Politics4 days ago
FIFA hypocrisy after Israel murder over 400 Palestinian footballers
-
Crypto World6 days agoFrom Crypto Treasury to RWA: ETHZilla Retreats and Relaunches as Forum Markets on Nasdaq
-
NewsBeat2 days agoIs it acceptable to comment on the appearance of strangers in public? Readers discuss
-
Tech4 days agoViral ad shows aged Musk, Altman, and Bezos using jobless humans to power AI
