 While analysts were sorting out the consequences of the Iranian crisis, I ran through the RSS feed for Monday, April 27, 2026. Three points where macroeconomics is already turning — but the morning briefings don't show it yet. First signal — Taiwan. The consumer confidence index edged up to 62.47 after a March low of 62.3, which was the lowest in three years. The figure is modest, but it's the first halt in the decline. Taiwan is a barometer of Asian demand and semiconductors. If confidence holds above this level, expect a revision of Q3 orders. Second — the Nikkei 225 hit an all-time high, ignoring the escalation in the Middle East. The Japanese market is not growing despite the crisis, but because of capital flows from emerging markets to safe haven Asia. This means the yen will strengthen faster than consensus forecasts. Third — gold rebounded on news that Iran sent a new proposal to the US. Classic logic would suggest a decline — geopolitical risk is decreasing. Instead, the metal is rising. Markets are hedging not war, but a potential inflationary shock from supply disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz. While a human reads three news items and tries to connect them, the AI agent has already built a correlation matrix. ASI Biont analyzes the macro feed in seconds — connect your RSS or data set and get 1500 tokens to start. asibiont.com Which of the three signals would you check first in your strategy?