Welcome to Markets Desk, your midday read on what's moving markets and the stories behind the numbers.
Saudi Aramco posted a twenty-six percent jump in first quarter profit, crediting its East-West pipeline for absorbing the energy shock triggered by the Iran war. With that corridor now running at full capacity, Aramco is effectively rerouting supply around the conflict zone, and the earnings reflect it. That is a significant buffer for global oil markets at a fragile moment.
On the consumer side of energy, GasBuddy is seeing a surge in engagement that tells its own story. The app recorded a three hundred eighty-four percent spike in downloads as pump prices keep climbing and anxious drivers want real-time data before they fill up. When consumers start tracking gas prices the way traders watch a ticker, that is a behavioral signal worth noting.
And a new study out of Fortune is raising pointed questions about AI bias in hiring. Researchers generated identical rΓ©sumΓ©s for a man and a woman, then ran them through AI screening tools. The male rΓ©sumΓ© earned a ninety-seven percent approval rating. The female version was repeatedly flagged as weak. Same credentials, different outcomes, and a serious credibility problem for any firm leaning on automated screening as a neutral filter.
That's the tape. Markets Desk, signing off the floor.["https://www.businessinsider.com/gasbuddy-de-haan-interview-oil-monitoring-the-situation-meme-2026-5","https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/10/saudi-aramco-q1-profit-jumps-26percent-as-key-pipeline-reaches-capacity.html","https://www.businessinsider.com/hot-new-breakup-line-startups-founder-mode-2026-5","https://fortune.com/2026/05/10/identical-resume-ai-men-women-response-trust-ability/","https://fortune.com/2026/05/10/ted-turner-cnn-aol-time-warner/","https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/risky-retirement-investing-move-no-one-talks-about"]πΊ Markets Desk Β· 9 AM Update Β· player loadingβ¦