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Jade Puffer: Sysdig Researchers Raise Alarm Over Autonomous AI-Orchestrated Ransomware Attack

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Cybersecurity researchers have uncovered what they describe as the first documented case of an autonomous, AI-orchestrated ransomware attack, a development that experts say could fundamentally reshape the cyber threat landscape by allowing criminals to launch sophisticated extortion campaigns at unprecedented scale and minimal cost.

Researchers at cybersecurity firm Sysdig said the attack, dubbed “Jade Puffer,” marks an important turning point because a large language model (LLM) appeared to coordinate the entire intrusion, from reconnaissance and credential theft to encryption and ransom demand generation, with limited human intervention.

While the attack itself did not employ particularly sophisticated hacking techniques, researchers said its significance lies in demonstrating how agentic artificial intelligence can automate the workflow of ransomware operations that traditionally required skilled cybercriminals.

“JadePuffer is a warning sign,” Michael Clark, Director of Threat Research at Sysdig, wrote in the company’s report.

“It’s a marker of where extortion tradecraft is heading.”

According to Sysdig, the attack illustrates how rapidly advances in agentic AI could lower the technical barriers that have traditionally limited ransomware groups. Rather than relying on experienced operators to manually execute each stage of an attack, the AI system autonomously identified valuable assets, adapted its tactics during execution and generated its own ransom instructions.

Clark noted that the ransomware did not introduce new exploitation techniques but instead demonstrated how artificial intelligence can efficiently coordinate existing ones.

“The skill floor for running ransomware has dropped to whatever it costs to run an agent,” Clark wrote.

“And if that agent is running on stolen credentials through LLMjacking, the cost to an attacker is close to zero.”

That observation indicates growing concerns over LLMjacking, a practice in which attackers steal access credentials for commercial AI services and use those models to power malicious operations at little or no cost.

Sysdig said Jade Puffer behaved much like an experienced ransomware operator.

The AI systematically searched compromised servers for high-value information, including:

  • AI API credentials
  • Cloud infrastructure access keys
  • Cryptocurrency wallet credentials
  • Database authentication details

After gathering sensitive information, the AI generated a ransom note that included payment instructions, a Bitcoin wallet address and a Proton Mail contact for negotiations.

According to Sysdig, the ransom document, labelled README_RANSOM, was automatically created by the AI during the attack.

AI Appeared To Explain Its Own Actions

Researchers said one of the clearest indicators that an AI model orchestrated the attack was the nature of the code left behind. Rather than containing only executable instructions, the payload included extensive natural-language explanations describing why each action was being performed.

“The decoded payloads are saturated with natural-language commentary explaining why each action is taken,” Clark wrote.

Those explanatory comments resemble outputs commonly produced by generative AI coding assistants and helped investigators attribute parts of the operation to an LLM.

Perhaps even more striking was the model’s apparent ability to adapt during execution. According to Oluwatobi Mustapha, a cybersecurity engineer who commented on the findings, the AI encountered an execution error, analyzed the problem, rewrote its own code, and resumed the attack in approximately 31 seconds.

“It read the error, fixed its own code and carried on. Took 31 seconds,” Mustapha wrote on X.

“I’ve spent longer than that staring at a typo.”

That level of autonomous problem-solving raises alarm about the ability of future AI-driven malware to become resilient without requiring direct human intervention.

Potential for Attacks At Massive Scale

Security researchers say the broader implication is not simply smarter ransomware, but vastly greater attack volume.

Geoff McDonald, Principal Research Manager on Microsoft’s Defender for Endpoint team, warned that AI fundamentally changes the economics of cybercrime.

“Ransomware (and destructive) attacks can now scale bounded primarily by attacker budget instead of being bounded by their human ability to operate campaigns themselves,” McDonald wrote on LinkedIn.

“There is now little stopping threat actors from operating thousands or tens of thousands of simultaneous campaigns.”

Unlike traditional ransomware groups, whose operations are constrained by staffing and technical expertise, AI agents could allow relatively small criminal organizations to conduct attacks at industrial scale.

The discovery comes as cybersecurity has emerged as one of the most sensitive issues surrounding advanced AI development. Leading AI companies have increasingly acknowledged that their newest models possess significantly enhanced offensive cybersecurity capabilities.

Both OpenAI and Anthropic have recently restricted access to some of their most advanced systems while conducting additional safety evaluations.

Anthropic’s Claude Mythos 5 and Fable 5 models became the subject of U.S. export restrictions after the Trump administration raised concerns that their cybersecurity capabilities could pose national security risks if widely distributed. OpenAI has similarly delayed broad releases of several frontier models while working with U.S. authorities on evaluation frameworks designed to assess cyber-related risks before public deployment.

Ironically, the same advances enabling more sophisticated cyberattacks are also transforming cyber defense. AI systems are used by enterprises to identify software vulnerabilities, automate threat detection, strengthen incident response, and patch security flaws more rapidly.

However, security experts warn that the advantage may shift toward attackers if autonomous offensive capabilities evolve faster than defensive safeguards.

McDonald believes the industry is approaching a pivotal moment.

“This is a transformative moment in cybersecurity that in my opinion the industry and world is not ready for,” he wrote.

“I believe [it] will have great negative outcomes as it accelerates over these next few months.”

While Sysdig cautioned that Jade Puffer remains an early example rather than evidence of widespread autonomous ransomware, researchers say it demonstrates that AI agents are rapidly evolving from productivity tools into operational cyber actors capable of executing complex attack chains.

Wall Street Eyes Fresh Gains as Fed hopes Lift Markets, Gold Steadies, and Oil eases after OPEC+ output increase

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U.S. stock futures edged higher early Monday, signaling a positive start to the trading week after Wall Street extended its rally to new highs, with investors drawing confidence from easing interest rate concerns, lower oil prices and a broadening market advance beyond technology stocks.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 20 points, while S&P 500 futures gained 0.32% and Nasdaq-100 futures climbed 0.83%, suggesting investors remain optimistic following another strong week for U.S. equities.

The gains come after the Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced nearly 2% last week, bringing the blue-chip index within reach of the 53,000-point milestone for the first time. The S&P 500 gained 1.8%, while the Nasdaq Composite rose 2.1%, underscoring continued investor appetite for equities despite heightened geopolitical and monetary policy uncertainty.

One of the most notable developments has been the rotation away from semiconductor stocks that have dominated markets for much of the AI-driven rally.

The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) fell 3.2% last week, marking its second consecutive weekly decline as investors locked in profits from chipmakers and shifted capital into sectors viewed as more attractively valued.

Instead, financials, healthcare, and industrial companies have emerged as new market leaders.

According to Mark Newton, Head of Technical Strategy at Fundstrat, the sector rotation represents a healthy evolution rather than a warning sign for equities.

“The broadening in sector rotation is a big positive, with Financials, Healthcare, and Industrials all closing at new weekly all-time highs this week and more than offsetting the consolidation in Semis,” Newton said.

He believes the semiconductor weakness is a temporary consolidation rather than the end of the artificial intelligence investment cycle.

“While the Semi decline is a short-term headwind that favors owning other sectors while it settles, it has not dented the broader indices,” he added.

Newton expects the S&P 500 to climb to 8,000 by mid-August, implying roughly another 7% upside from Friday’s close of 7,483.24.

Investors Await First Fed Minutes Under Kevin Warsh

Attention this week will center on the Federal Reserve, with investors awaiting the release on Wednesday of the minutes from the June policy meeting, the first chaired by Kevin Warsh since he assumed leadership of the U.S. central bank. The minutes are expected to provide fresh insight into policymakers’ thinking after recent economic data suggested inflationary pressures may be easing while labor market conditions continue to soften.

Last week’s employment report showed U.S. payroll growth slowed significantly in June, while job gains for the previous two months were revised lower, reinforcing expectations that the labor market is gradually cooling.

The weaker-than-expected jobs figures prompted investors to reduce expectations of another near-term interest rate increase. According to CME FedWatch data, markets now assign roughly a 55% probability that the Fed raises rates in September, down from more than 60% before the employment report.

Strategists at Commonwealth Bank of Australia cautioned that the meeting minutes could offer fewer policy clues than usual, noting Chairman Warsh has argued the Fed should provide less forward guidance than previous leadership.

Meanwhile, OCBC analysts maintained that although hiring has slowed, the decline in unemployment suggests the labor market remains relatively tight.

“The broader U.S. dollar outlook remains constructive,” they said, forecasting a 2% to 3% appreciation in the dollar during the second half of the year.

Global Markets Mixed

Asian equity markets finished Monday with mixed performances.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 ended little changed, while the broader Topix gained 0.92%.

South Korea’s Kospi slipped 0.46%, with the small-cap Kosdaq falling 2.46%.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 declined 0.15%, China’s CSI 300 finished broadly flat, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 0.81%.

European shares also traded higher during early dealings, with the Stoxx Europe 600 gaining 0.11%.

Media stocks led regional gains after Comcast-owned Sky agreed to acquire ITV’s media and entertainment business, while travel and leisure companies advanced following EasyJet’s agreement to a $7.3 billion takeover by Castlelake.

Gold Steadies As Rate Outlook Improves

Gold prices remained close to two-week highs after last week’s weaker U.S. employment data eased concerns that the Federal Reserve would continue tightening monetary policy aggressively.

Spot gold traded near $4,175 per ounce, while U.S. gold futures rose 1.5% to approximately $4,187.

The precious metal gained more than 2% last week, ending a four-week losing streak.

According to Tim Waterer, Chief Market Analyst at KCM Trade, bullion has benefited from reduced expectations for higher interest rates.

“Gold has regained some poise as markets dial back rate-hike expectations. While this provides relief on the yield front, the dollar’s strength continues to act as a ceiling,” he said.

Lower interest rates typically support gold because the metal does not generate income, making it relatively more attractive when bond yields decline.

However, the modest rebound may prove limited.

J.P. Morgan recently lowered its expectations for gold demand, forecasting average prices of $4,300 during the third quarter and $4,500 in the fourth quarter, citing softer buying from key investment sectors.

Other precious metals weakened slightly, with silver, platinum and palladium all trading lower.

Oil Slips After OPEC+ Increases Supply Targets

Oil prices edged lower after OPEC+ agreed to raise production targets again from August.

Brent crude slipped to around $71.88 per barrel, while West Texas Intermediate (WTI) traded near $68.58.

The producer alliance approved another increase of 188,000 barrels per day, adding to similar quota increases announced for June and July.

Although the decision points toward higher future supplies, actual production remains constrained because exports from several major producers continue recovering following disruptions caused by the recent conflict involving Iran and the temporary closure of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

Tony Sycamore, market analyst at IG, said the latest production increase had been widely anticipated.

“The number was largely in line with expectations,” he said, noting that production quotas currently remain less important than actual export capacity following recent geopolitical disruptions.

Market participants continue to monitor the recovery of Gulf oil exports alongside diplomatic negotiations between Washington and Tehran, developments that will likely remain the primary drivers of crude prices over the coming weeks.

Currency Markets Focus On Yen Intervention Risks

Currency markets remained dominated by the Japanese yen, which hovered near a 40-year low against the U.S. dollar.

The yen traded around 161.6 per dollar, remaining close to last week’s weakest level since 1986.

The currency’s continued weakness has intensified speculation that Japanese authorities could intervene to stabilize exchange rates. Although many analysts expect any intervention to trigger only temporary gains, traders remain cautious given Tokyo’s increasingly unpredictable approach.

According to Marc Chandler, Chief Market Strategist at Bannockburn Global Forex, options markets suggest some investors have begun purchasing short-dated dollar puts to protect long-dollar positions in case Japanese authorities step into the market.

Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar index traded around 100.9, holding near a two-week low after last week’s employment report reduced expectations for further Federal Reserve tightening.

Overall, investors enter the week balancing optimism over resilient corporate earnings and moderating inflation against lingering uncertainty surrounding monetary policy, geopolitical developments and the durability of the AI-driven investment boom that has largely influenced global equity markets over the past two years.

Emmanuel N. Nnorom To Become UBA Group next Chairman As Elumelu Retires

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Good people, please join me in congratulating one of Ovim’s distinguished sons, Mr. Emmanuel N. Nnorom, on his appointment as the next Chairman of UBA Group.

Emmanuel is one of Africa’s most accomplished banking professionals, with decades of leadership experience across the financial services industry. I have no doubt that he will build on UBA’s remarkable legacy, strengthen its pan-African franchise, and create enduring value for shareholders, customers, employees, and all stakeholders.

This leadership transition follows the announcement by United Bank for Africa Plc that Mr. Tony O. Elumelu, Group Chairman, will retire from the Board on 21 August 2026, having completed the 12-year tenure limit prescribed for Non-Executive Directors of banks by the Central Bank of Nigeria.

At its meeting on 6 July 2026, the Board accepted Mr. Elumelu’s retirement and unanimously elected Mr. Emmanuel N. Nnorom, currently a Non-Executive Director of the Bank, as his successor, with effect from 21 August 2026.

Congratulations, Chairman ENN, on this well-deserved appointment. We celebrate this important milestone and wish you wisdom, strength, and continued success as you lead one of Africa’s most respected financial institutions into its next chapter. We also commend Chairman Tony Elumelu for his exceptional leadership and transformational contributions to UBA and the African banking industry.

Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe

UBA Customer and Shareholder

Photo: UBA GCEO, TOE, ENN (left to right)

Bank of England Weighs Leverage Rule Review that Could Slash UK Borrowing Costs but Heighten Systemic Risks

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As Britain grapples with elevated public debt and volatile global markets, the Bank of England is preparing to weigh in on potential changes to its leverage rules that could significantly lower government borrowing costs — but at the potential expense of financial system resilience, according to industry analysts and former regulators.

The central bank is expected to provide an update on its review of leverage requirements and related buffers in its half-yearly Financial Stability Report, due for release at 0930 GMT on Tuesday. The review follows a relaxation of the Bank’s main capital requirement in December and comes amid looser U.S. leverage rules introduced in November, which have intensified competitive pressures on British lenders.

Barclays has been particularly vocal, urging the Bank to exclude British government bonds, known as gilts, from the leverage ratio calculation that requires banks to hold capital equivalent to slightly over 3.25% of their assets. Such a change could encourage UK banks to hold up to £150 billion more gilts, reduce average yields by around 0.2 percentage points, and save the government approximately £2.5 billion annually in interest payments at a time when public finances remain under strain.

The bank specified that any exemption should apply only to “unencumbered” gilts not already pledged as collateral elsewhere.

Lloyds offered a more conservative assessment, suggesting the change might generate around £30 billion in additional gilt demand but could still deliver at least £1 billion in annual interest savings — nearly enough to offset a recent defense funding shortfall.

“Supporting the bid for gilt issuance has become a primary concern for the Treasury. A regulatory change that mechanically raises bank gilt demand is politically attractive,” Lloyds fixed income analysts Karim Henide and Sam Hill wrote.

Britain’s government has grown increasingly dependent on foreign investors, including hedge funds, to finance its borrowing — a dynamic that has contributed to higher yields. Domestic banks currently hold only about half as much government debt as their eurozone counterparts.

Caution from Former Regulators

The potential shift has drawn sharp warnings from some former Bank officials. Sam Woods, who served as deputy governor for prudential regulation until last week, told financiers in October that exempting all gilts from leverage rules “would be a profound, and highly risky, change.” Woods has since been succeeded by Katharine Braddick, formerly a senior executive at Barclays.

David Aikman, who helped shape the original rules at the Bank and now directs the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, argued that the leverage ratio was never designed to serve as the primary brake on bank lending. He noted that the fact that other risk-weighted capital rules were no longer constraining banks suggested deeper issues, possibly related to how risks from lending to hedge funds and non-bank financial institutions are assessed.

“The answer isn’t to take the batteries out of the fire alarm, but to investigate what’s going on, figure out which risk weights have fallen too far and recalibrate those risk weights,” Aikman told Reuters.

He cautioned that gilts are not risk-free assets and could still lose value. The euro zone debt crisis of the early 2010s demonstrated the dangers of too close an entanglement between bank health and sovereign finances, he added.

Aikman suggested the Bank was more likely to eliminate a UK-specific cyclical component of the leverage ratio rather than implement a broad gilt exemption.

The review also encompasses other areas of potential risk. The Bank is conducting its first stress test of private markets’ resilience to a major geopolitical shock. Additionally, it is examining the gilt repo market, which had £74 billion in aggregate net borrowing in March.

In September, the Bank proposed minimum risk margins or “haircuts” for non-centrally cleared gilt repo transactions, with a full update expected in early 2027. Deputy Governor Sarah Breeden told an industry conference in May that “doing nothing is not an option” regarding the gilt repo market. While the market enhances day-to-day liquidity in government debt, the Bank has warned it is dominated by a small number of hedge funds pursuing similar strategies, creating potential difficulties in trading gilts during periods of stress.

The Trade-Off Between Fiscal Relief and Stability

The proposals come against a backdrop of stretched public finances and elevated borrowing needs. Any reduction in gilt yields through increased bank participation could provide meaningful fiscal breathing room. However, the trade-off involves fundamental questions about the appropriate level of financial system safeguards and the role of banks in holding sovereign debt.

The Bank’s review is more like a broader reassessment of regulatory frameworks in response to changing market conditions and international developments.

However, Tuesday’s Financial Stability Report will offer the clearest indication yet of the central bank’s thinking on these critical issues. The outcome is expected to have lasting implications for Britain’s bond market, banking sector, and overall economic strategy in an uncertain global environment.

Hong Kong Braces For Record Wave Of IPO Lock-Up Expirations As $274bn In Shares Threaten To Pressure Market

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Hong Kong’s equity market is preparing for an unprecedented wave of lock-up expirations that could unleash billions of dollars’ worth of shares onto the market, raising concerns about increased selling pressure at a time when investor sentiment toward the city’s stock market remains fragile.

Some of the best-performing initial public offerings (IPOs) of the past year will begin releasing previously restricted shares this week, giving cornerstone investors and early shareholders their first opportunity to cash out after months of extraordinary gains.

Market participants say the timing could create a significant overhang for Hong Kong equities, particularly as investors grapple with slowing momentum in the city’s broader stock market.

Chinese artificial intelligence developer Knowledge Atlas Technology will be among the first major companies to face lock-up expirations, with 25.6 million shares, representing nearly 6% of its outstanding stock, becoming eligible for trading on Wednesday following the end of a six-month cornerstone investor restriction.

The stock has been one of Hong Kong’s standout performers, soaring more than 1,200% since its market debut, creating strong incentives for early investors to realize profits.

Other high-profile technology listings are also approaching similar milestones.

AI startup MiniMax will see shares equivalent to approximately 45% of its outstanding stock become tradable, while Shanghai Iluvatar CoreX Semiconductor, another company benefiting from investor enthusiasm surrounding artificial intelligence, will have about 4.3% of its shares unlocked.

In total, six recently listed companies are scheduled to experience lock-up expirations this week.

The release of such a large volume of previously restricted shares comes after a remarkable period for Hong Kong’s IPO market.

According to EY, companies that listed during the first half of 2026 generated an average first-day gain of 61%, reflecting strong investor appetite for new listings, particularly those linked to artificial intelligence, semiconductors and advanced technology.

However, those impressive IPO returns stand in sharp contrast to the performance of Hong Kong’s broader equity market. The benchmark Hang Seng Index has declined 8.9% this year, highlighting the divergence between enthusiasm for select new technology listings and persistent weakness across the wider market.

Analysts warn that the combination of substantial gains and expiring lock-up periods could encourage widespread profit-taking.

Cornerstone investors, institutional shareholders, and early backers who were prohibited from selling immediately after the IPO may now choose to lock in returns, increasing the supply of shares available to the market.

Morgan Stanley believes the pressure could intensify over the coming months. The investment bank expects secondary selling activity to become particularly concentrated in July and September, describing lock-up expirations as one of the principal near-term risks facing Hong Kong equities.

“These events can create liquidity headwinds even when fundamentals remain intact,” Morgan Stanley analysts wrote, adding that the expected increase in secondary selling forms part of the bank’s cautious outlook on the Hong Kong market.

Goldman Sachs estimates the scale of the challenge could be unprecedented. The investment bank projects that approximately $274 billion worth of previously locked-up shares will become eligible for trading across Hong Kong over the next 12 months, representing the largest volume of lock-up expirations the market has ever experienced.

Historically, such events have often weighed on share prices.

Goldman Sachs found that stocks typically decline between 4% and 7% during the three to six months following major lock-up expirations, as additional supply enters the market and investors take profits. The impact could be particularly pronounced among artificial intelligence companies, many of which have enjoyed spectacular gains fueled by global enthusiasm for AI-related investments.

Chinese AI developers and semiconductor companies have attracted substantial capital this year as investors have sought exposure to Beijing’s efforts to strengthen domestic technology capabilities while benefiting from the global AI infrastructure boom.

Whether those elevated valuations can withstand a surge in secondary selling remains uncertain.

However, beyond the immediate market impact, the record volume of expiring lock-ups reflects Hong Kong’s resurgence as a preferred listing destination for mainland Chinese technology companies.

After several years of subdued fundraising activity, improving regulatory conditions, renewed investor appetite, and robust demand for AI-related assets have revived the city’s IPO market. However, analysts caution that a successful primary market does not automatically translate into sustained secondary market performance.