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Deals and new partnerships at Africa-France summit

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In tonight’s edition, sovereignty was the buzzword of Kenyan President William Ruto at the close of the Africa Forward summit in Nairobi. Also, in the biggest change on the ground in months,  Rwanda-backed M23 rebels have retreated from seized territory in the DRC. And as the war in Iran continues to disrupt exports around the world, Zimbabwe’s horticulture industry is also struggling with rising shipping costs, which are threatening vital exports. 

Homebuilders in Sun Belt housing markets are working through a ‘spec overhang’

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Speaking at the Bank of America Housing Symposium in June 2025, Toll Brothers CEO Doug Yearley—who has since stepped down—acknowledged that parts of Arizona, Florida, and Texas were dealing with spec inventory “overhangs” that he said would eventually “clean up [over time] because the builders are starting fewer spec homes in the softer market, and I think that will naturally work its way out.”

At the height of the Pandemic Housing Boom, when nearly everything homebuilders were building was flying off the shelves, there were only 32,000 unsold completed new-build homes in March 2022. Once the boom fizzled out, that figure quickly began to rebound—especially in Sun Belt boomtowns—reaching a high of 134,000 unsold completed new-build homes by December 2025.

However, data published this week shows that the number of unsold completed new-build homes has, at least for now, fallen to 119,000 as of March 2026. While the count of unsold completed new-build homes is still up year-over-year (there were 113,000 unsold completed in March 2025), the decline over the past few months has been larger than seasonality alone would suggest.

To put the number of unsold completed new single-family homes into better historic context, we have the ResiClub Finished Unsold New Homes Supply Index. It accounts for unsold completed inventory relative to new home sales. A higher index score indicates a softer national new construction market with greater supply slack, while a lower index score signifies a tighter new construction market with less supply slack. Over the past few months, that reading has almost drifted back down into the “historically normal” range.

After experiencing a softer 2025 than expected—and greater-than-expected margin compression—many giant homebuilders told analysts heading into 2026 that they’d pivot toward fewer spec builds and more build-to-order homes. The reason was simple: build-to-order margins are materially higher. Built-to-order homes tend to generate higher margins because they’re sold before construction begins, reducing inventory carrying costs and the risk of having to deploy larger incentives to sell them.

Doing fewer specs and starts in softer pockets of the Sun Belt, has already helped some of the builders reduce their count of unsold completed homes. Just look at America’s largest homebuilder D.R. Horton.

Here’s what Paul Romanowski, CEO of D.R. Horton, said during the company’s April 21, 2026 earnings call:

“Unsold homes [for us] are down 25% from December and 35% from a year ago, with both unsold homes as a percentage of total inventory and completed unsold inventory at their lowest levels since fiscal 2023 for homes closed in the second quarter.”

“We expect starts in the third quarter to be lower than the second quarter, and we will continue to manage our inventory levels and start space based on market conditions.”

While the U.S. Census Bureau doesn’t give us a greater market-by-market breakdown on these unsold completed new-builds, we have a good idea where they are based on total active inventory homes for sale (including existing)—likely much of it is in the Mountain West and Sun Belt, particularly around the Gulf.

We should point out that while many markets in Texas and Florida experienced significant post–Pandemic Housing Boom inventory bounce back, that inventory growth has decelerated in recent months. In fact, many parts of Florida are now seeing year-over-year active inventory for sale declines. The heavy discounting by homebuilders in weaker pockets of Texas and Florida to move unsold inventory—combined with reduced housing starts and fewer spec builds in those pockets heading into 2026—has, in part, contributed to that slowdown in inventory growth.

Unlike the existing-home market—where U.S. existing-home sales are still -23.6% below pre-pandemic 2019 levels—U.S. new-home sales are essentially on par with pre-pandemic 2019 levels right now 👇

Why haven’t U.S. new home sales come down more given the affordability picture and what’s happened in the existing-home market?

A lot of it boils down to the fact that many homebuilders since the Pandemic Housing Boom fizzled out have done larger affordability adjustments—including everything from bigger buydowns, more money back at close, and even outright price cuts—in order to keep moving product when they run into softness in a given neighborhood. The most aggressive homebuilder on the incentive front is Lennar. Last quarter, Lennar spent the equivalent of 14% of the final sales price on sales incentives. For a $400,000 home, that translates to $56,000 in incentives. Lennar’s cycle low in Q2 2022, when it spent 1.5% of the final sales price on sales incentives.

In order to do bigger incentives—and pay for sticky land prices—homebuilders have been compressing margins. Indeed, all 11 of the major publicly traded U.S. homebuilders that ResiClub tracks the most closely have seen year-over-year gross margin compression.

So, in other words, big homebuilders have been willing to adjust prices and incentives in order to maintain sales volume, while existing home sellers, in aggregate, have fought harder against price adjustments—at the expense of speed of sale and turnover. Another factor is that homebuilders’ willingness to sell isn’t impacted by so-called affordability “lock-in.” Ever since mortgage rates spiked, high switching costs have left many homeowners either unwilling or unable to sell and buy at today’s prices and rates, further suppressing existing-home turnover.

Before we conclude today’s new construction report, here’s a historic look at nationally aggregated permits:

Covid-era conspiracy theories accuse Bill Gates of ‘creating’ hantavirus outbreak

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As the number of confirmed hantavirus cases from the Dutch-flagged cruise ship MV Hondius reaches 9, social media users firmly revived Covid-19 era conspiracy theories of “bioweapons” and “plandemics,” making the online rhetoric feel eerily familiar. Among these resurrected theories, the name of American billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates has once again emerged.

CFTC tells appeals court states cannot regulate prediction markets as gambling

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CFTC tells appeals court states cannot regulate prediction markets as gambling



A new CFTC court filing deepens the battle over Kalshi and sports prediction markets, with the agency claiming exclusive authority over event contracts.

Android 17 is about to make your phone a much better content creation tool

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Google has announced a slate of creator-focused updates coming with Android 17 at the Android Show I/O Edition, including deeper Instagram camera integration, AI-powered tools in the Edits app, and new a Screen Reactions feature.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang to new grads: ‘Run, don’t walk’ toward AI

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Jensen Huang left Carnegie Mellon University’s class of 2026 with a message that pushed back against graduation-season anxiety: there’s no better time than now to be starting a career.

During a commencement speech on Sunday, the Nvidia CEO told the new grads that “the timing could not be more perfect” to launch a career than right now.

“Your career starts at the beginning of the AI revolution,” Huang told the crowd of 5,800 undergraduate and graduate students. 

This sentiment landed better with Carnegie Mellon grads—the university which is widely recognized as the birthplace of artificial intelligence and robotics—than it did with others. At the University of Central Florida, humanities department commencement speaker Gloria Cauflield, VP of strategic alliances at Tavistock Group, was booed after touting AI as the “next industrial revolution.”

The dissatisfaction with that view points to the broader anxiety new grads are facing as AI changes entry-level hiring. A new survey of 1,000 U.S.-based business majors by AI agent company 11x found that 80% of graduating seniors believe AI has cut entry-level jobs. Another recent ZipRecruiter survey showed that new grads are feeling optimistic about their futures, even if they feel unprepared to enter a job market that has been reshaped and redefined by AI. 

In recent public speeches, Huang has maintained a spirit of optimism about young people starting their careers while the job market shapeshifts because of AI. 

That was no different during his commencement speech, during which he said that AI should not be feared, but rather utilized optimistically and responsibly. He doubled down on his belief that while AI might not displace or replace people from their jobs, someone using AI better than them might.

While Huang acknowledged that AI has created uncertainty for many people, he said that “every major technological revolution in history created fear alongside opportunity.”

“Like every transformative technology before it, it will bring both great promise and real risks,” Huang said. “The responsibility of our generation is not only to advance AI but to advance it wisely.”

“History shows that societies that retreat from technology do not stop progress,” he continued. “They only surrender the opportunity to shape it and to benefit from it. So, the answer is not to fear the future. The answer is to guide it wisely, build it responsibly and ensure that its benefits reach as many people as possible.”

Huang also touched on the trillions of dollars and enormous amounts of energy needed to power what he calls a “new industrial era.” Data centers are projected to require close to $7 trillion in investment by 2030. This year alone, Nvidia has poured $40 billion into investments and partnerships tied to AI infrastructure.

Now that anyone can ask AI to build a useful tool or product, Huang said, anyone can be a programmer. At the end of the speech, the billionaire CEO told new grads to “run, don’t walk” towards that democratization of capability.

“AI will change every job,” Huang said. “But the task and the purpose of a job are not the same. Many tasks will be automated. Some jobs will disappear. But many new jobs and entire new industries will be created.”

“AI does not replace human purpose,” he added. “It amplifies human capability.”

Mali, immigration and DR Congo: Five key takeaways from Macron's interview with FRANCE 24

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French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday spoke to FRANCE 24 at the close of the Africa Forward Summit in Nairobi, Kenya. Here’s what you need to know about how Macron sees France’s changing relationship with African nations.

Cronos hits $3.53B market cap as selling surges – Is CRO overvalued?

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CRO rally splits market sentiment: perpetual traders stay bullish while spot selling intensifies



CRO’s rally faces spot market selling despite bullish derivatives positioning.

Aptos Pushes Encrypted Mempool Upgrade to Protect Users From Frontrunning and Censorship

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Aptos Pushes Encrypted Mempool Upgrade to Protect Users From Frontrunning and Censorship



Aptos has introduced a proposal for a native Encrypted Mempool system that would allow users to submit transactions privately while still maintaining the speed and transparency of the network.

If approved through governance, Aptos said the feature would make it the first Layer 1 blockchain to offer built-in encrypted transaction submission directly at the protocol level.

Aptos Targets MEV Exploitation

The system is designed to protect users from frontrunning, censorship, and orderflow manipulation. Users would be able to send encrypted transactions with a single click, while all transaction data would still become visible on-chain after block confirmation.

Aptos said the proposal comes as decentralized exchange activity continues to grow rapidly. It added that DEX spot trading volumes regularly surpassed $200 billion per month in 2025 and averaged roughly $476 billion monthly during the third quarter. While decentralized exchanges removed reliance on centralized custody and settlement systems, Aptos noted that most blockchains still expose pending transactions before they are finalized, which allows validators and other network participants to observe and potentially exploit trading activity before execution.

According to Aptos, this visibility has contributed to the rise of the MEV market, where validators and traders profit by reordering or exploiting pending transactions. The proposed Encrypted Mempool aims to eliminate that exposure by ensuring transaction intent remains confidential until execution while preserving the network’s same security assumptions.

Aptos Labs explained that the system relies on threshold cryptography and a distributed key generation process that occurs before each validator epoch. Transactions are submitted as encrypted payloads, and validators collectively decrypt them only after a block has been ordered. The company added that traditional encrypted transaction systems face major scalability issues because validators must individually communicate and process partial decryptions for every encrypted transaction. This ends up creating heavy communication, computation, and latency costs across the network.

To solve this problem, its research team developed a batched threshold decryption scheme that allows validators to generate a single partial decryption for an entire batch of encrypted transactions instead of handling them individually. Aptos said this significantly reduces communication and computation overhead while allowing most processing work to happen in advance.

The company further revealed that the system prevents replay attacks, removes the need for users to compete for encryption slots, and avoids transaction resubmissions. Aptos said the encrypted mempool integrates directly into the network’s consensus protocol and introduces minimal additional latency.

APT Price Action

Its native token, APT, has climbed steadily over the past 30 days, rising from around $0.82 in mid-April to nearly $1.10 by mid-May. APT saw several sharp upward moves during the month, briefly crossing $1.20 before pulling back slightly.

Over the past 24 hours, however, it declined by almost 2% to trade near $1.10.

The post Aptos Pushes Encrypted Mempool Upgrade to Protect Users From Frontrunning and Censorship appeared first on CryptoPotato.

Google just announced a new kind of laptop, and it puts Gemini everywhere

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Google has officially unveiled Googlebooks, a new category of laptops built around its Gemini AI assistant. Devices from Acer, Asus, Dell, HP, and Lenovo are expected this fall, though pricing and full hardware details have not yet been disclosed.

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