A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Jun 23, 2026

Data Reveal Russia's Spring Offensive And War Are Close To Breaking Down

For the past three months, Ukraine has netted more territory retaken than Russian has gained. One month is a data point; three months are a trend.

The broader implication is that Russia's spring-summer offensive is close to culminating - military jargon for coming to an end - with summer having only arrived three days ago. This suggests that the Kremlin's ability to seize more territory of any significance is waning. The next question is to what extent Ukraine can pick up the momentum. JL

Mick Ryan reports in Futura Doctrina:

Russian may have lost as much as 57 square miles of Ukrainian territory last month. Any advances reported are minor. Russia has struggled to convert its gains into a wider breakthrough. The best that might be said of Russia’s spring offensive on the ground is that it has stalled, and without a major injection of resources, appears close to culminating. Ukraine has seized the strategic initiative in this war, and it is using its current momentum to shape both the battlespace and the negotiating table. Each strike that reaches the Russian capital, sets a refinery alight or grounds traffic at Moscow’s airports, widens the gap between the Kremlin’s narrative of inevitable victory and the lived reality of Russia under Ukrainian drone and missile attacks.

Failed Russian Armored Assault On Sloviansk Leaves Burning Vehicles Behind

Feeling increasing pressure - and desperation - from the Kremlin, Russian units attempted to force a breakthrough at Sloviansk with an armored attack. To no one's surprise, it failed, leaving burning tanks and vehicles on the approach routes before they could even reach the Ukrainian defenses.

Given the widely-known strength of Ukraine's Fortress Belt defensive positions, as well as the increasing lethality of their drone units, it is not clear why the Russian command thought this might work. But then that refusal to acknowledge reality has characterized Russian tactics since the day they invaded. JL

RFU News reports:

At Sloviansk Russian forces launched one of their largest mechanized assaults in months in an attempt to force a breakthrough through the outer layer of the defenses in a single push. What followed left burning vehicles scattered across the battlefield. The main weakness of this Russian assault was that both attack groups had to cross exposed approach routes. That allowed Ukrainian defenders to track the advancing elements early, slow them on the route in, and then strike isolated groups as the assault began to break apart. Instead of arriving as a concentrated force, the Russian assault was reduced to smaller fragments that could be destroyed separately. A loss of momentum before the attackers ever reached the line caused burning wrecks to accumulate along the approach because Ukrainian defenses had turned the routes into a kill zone. 

SpaceX Stock Drops 16% In 3rd Day of Decline, Now Below IPO

Welcome back to 'the glorious days of yesteryear,' when stocks shot up like rockets, then quickly descended to the level reflected in their financials - assuming they had such a thing. 

What has happened to SpaceX over the past week will be familiar to anyone who endured - or read about - the dotcom boom, when companies with no real business but with .net in their title could go public on a story and a prayer. Or, as some used to say, 'buy the story, sell the news.' The reality is that projected sales and profits never supported SpaceX's hyped up valuation, which is now below a 'mere' $2 trillion. Reversion to the mean comes for us all and, in SpaceX's case, is now getting - somewhat - closer to actual potential. JL

William Gavin reports in Marketwatch and Alexander Osipovich reports in the Wall Street Journal:

Elon Musk’s company is falling ahead of the opening bell, putting its market cap on track to fall below $2 trillion for the first time since its blockbuster IPO. SpaceX shares are down more than 4% premarket, to about $148—below the $150 level where they began trading on June 12. Yesterday, SpaceX shares just had their worst day yet — carrying them below their closing price from their first day of trading less than two weeks ago. The stock finished Monday’s session at $154.60, with declines escalating toward the end of the trading day. SpaceX shares closed well below the $160.95 at the finish on June 12, when the company went public. That means that anyone who bought the stock after its first day of trading has lost money — at least on paper. 

Jun 22, 2026

Ukraine's "e-Points" Are Steering Drone Teams Towards Higher Value Targets

One of the most impressive aspects of the evolving Ukrainian way of war is the degree to which they have adapted lessons from private sector managerial theory and market mechanisms to lead and incentivize their forces in order to execute the strategies to achieve the outcomes they want.

One such example is the 'e-points' system which rewards units for hitting and eliminating important targets. New analyses show that the high command's ability to identify shifting priorities is to increase or decrease the number of points awarded. In addition, the troops at the front are able to communicate what they deem important by spending more or fewer points on weapons or other equipment based on their experience and assessment of manufacturers' products. It is, as the Defense Minister has stated, 'about rapid scaling of effective solutions.' JL

Sinead Baker reports in Business Insider:

Ukraine's "e-Points" system, which rewards soldiers for hitting prized targets, is steering soldiers toward higher-value Russian assets. The rewards have worked to "incentivize units along the front line to go after challenging targets - and that's having effects." Previously, soldiers focused on "things in front of you," like infantry and tanks. Now, soldiers are incentivized to "go after more complex targets," including rear-areas more than 100 kms from the front. The point system is one of the factors contributing to Ukraine's momentum, as Kyiv uses new drones and planning to hit 'safe' targets. Points gives Ukraine's command a way to shift battlefield behavior quickly. If the military decides it needs more of a certain target destroyed, it can raise the reward. Units then have a direct reason to adjust because points help them get equipment they need. It helps Ukraine innovate quickly, knowing what weapons front-line soldiers want. "This is about rapid scaling of effective solutions." 

How Attacking Kyiv's Cathedral Exposes Putin's Desperation, Diminished Options

After all the Ukrainians have been through over the past four years, this is the best the Kremlin can do? Attack a world historical religious landmark? As if that is going to change the calculus of the war that Russia is losing on the battlefield, on the seas, in the air and on its economy.

What the attack on the Lavra Cathedral complex reveals is Putin's desperation and his diminishing options. It was a pathetic lashing out of rage and frustration, which simply reflects his impotence. JL

Phillips O'Brien reports in his substack:

The Russians could have attacked Kyiv's Lavra Cathedral complex any time since 2022. Until this week they did not do so, realizing that attacking such a building of historic, religious and cultural value to Ukrainians held out no strategic benefit but did hold great risk of enraging Ukrainians even more and appalling European opinion. What the attack revealed is that the Russians have little new to add to their terror and threats. Faced with an ongoing Ukrainian long-range assault on their strategic industries, the Russians could not escalate strategically and have no way to do more to the Ukrainian economy or war machine. All they could do to show their desperation was attack a great historical monument. Their way of escalating is now limited to going after soft targets of cultural and emotional value.

Two Russian Battalions Decimated In One Month's Kostiantynivka Fighting

The severity of Russian losses in this crucial sector, the key to Russia's desire to take Ukraine's Fortress Belt cities beyond it, has led to a change in tactics which reflects the Russian desperation. 

Instead of mass meat assaults or infiltration attempts by small teams, the Russians are now sending individual soldiers, accompanies by drones, to attack. The problem is that Ukraine's drone and intelligence superiority make even these efforts unable to succeed. But the broader implication is that if the best the Kremlin can do is send one soldier with a few drones as his 'comrades,' they have little chance of creating a distraction, let alone a breakthrough. JL

Yevhelia Mazur reports in Liga.net:

During the past month of fighting against Ukraine's 100th Mechanized Brigade on the Kostiantynivka front, Russian forces lost the equivalent in strength of two battalions, with 910 soldiers killed or wounded. The 100th and Ukraine's 24th Mechanized Brigade report Russian army has changed its assault tactics and is increasingly sending not groups of several soldiers but individual infantrymen—escorted by drones—toward Ukrainian positions.

US Companies Increasingly Turn To Cheaper Chinese AI

Despite the continuing claims that 'this time is different,' it turns out that AI is still subject to Economics 1: if something becomes too expensive, the market will seek a cheaper alternative.

This is especially true for corporate clients concerned about the returns they still cannot quantify, as well as smaller enterprises that just can't afford extraordinary AI costs.  Some larger companies want to retain relationships with Anthropic and OpenAI because of strategic partnership interests and the brand umbrella, but even Microsoft is reportedly testing Chinese models. The reality is that token-based revenue models have altered the affordability equation. The result will thus inevitably be that less expensive options will have to be embraced for AI use to continue growing. JL

Viola Zhou reports in Rest of World:

While an hourlong coding session costs $10 on Claude, the same work cost less than 50 cents on DeepSeek. U.S.-based developers and small companies are turning to Chinese AI to cut costs. Although Chinese models still lag behind the best US ones in performance, they can handle most tasks at a fraction of the price. DeepSeek’s share of token usage jumped from under 1% to 17% in May. The affordability is especially attractive to independents and startups as well as "medium-sized businesses starting to get into AI but are wary of the costs.” Large companies, especially those in highly regulated industries, are still wary about Chinese models due to concerns about data security, censorship, and geopolitical risk. “Chinese models are becoming part of the global AI infrastructure layer. But usage is only the first step. The next test is whether the Chinese can convert usage into revenue, enterprise trust, and durable distribution.”