Wednesday, July 1, 2026 See who Washington just made rich Go Pro · $20/mo →
Money Racket
Who Cashes In When Washington Moves
DEFENSELockheed Martin Lands $35B THAAD Contract to Quadruple Missile ProductiontodayENERGYDOE's $17.5B in Federal Loans Is Reshaping the Nuclear Energy Investment CasetodayTECHTrump's Quantum Orders Set Hard Deadlines for Post-Quantum Cryptography — and Create a Compliance MarkettodayTECHTrump Administration Lifts Export Controls on Anthropic's Claude AI ModelstodayWHITE HOUSEU.S.-Iran Ceasefire Deal Signed, but White House Asks Congress for $87.6B to Cover the War's TabtodayHEALTHCARE & FDADOJ's $6.5B Healthcare Fraud Takedown Puts Medicare Advantage Billing Under a MicroscopetodayCRYPTOBitcoin ETF Outflows Top $4 Billion in June as Citi Cuts Its Price ForecasttodayTRADE & TARIFFSTrump Suspends Fertilizer Tariffs, Cutting Input Costs for U.S. FarmerstodayMARKETSSupreme Court Gives Trump Power to Fire FTC Commissioners, Sparing the FedtodayHEALTHCARE & FDAFDA Launches Safety Reassessment of BHT and ADA, Two Additives in Millions of Food Productstoday
Sun Protection

Titanium Dioxide

Mineral UV blocker that sits on skin surface.

Also known as: TiO2, CI 77891, titanium oxide; same name in INCI.

What it is
Titanium dioxide is a naturally occurring mineral oxide that works as a physical (mineral) sunscreen. It sits on the skin surface and reflects and scatters both UVA and UVB rays before they penetrate.
What it does
Provides broad-spectrum UV protection by creating a physical barrier that deflects sunlight away from skin. Unlike chemical sunscreens, it does not absorb into the skin or convert UV energy to heat. It begins protecting immediately upon application and is photostable, meaning it doesn't degrade in sunlight.
The evidence
Strong clinical evidence supports titanium dioxide as an effective broad-spectrum UV blocker; it is FDA-approved and recommended by dermatologists. Multiple studies confirm its safety profile and efficacy at concentrations typically 5–10% in sunscreen formulations.
Best for
All skin types, especially sensitive, reactive, and eczema-prone skin; ideal for those who cannot tolerate chemical sunscreens or have a history of photosensitivity.
Pairs well with
Zinc oxide (complementary mineral blocker for enhanced UVA coverage); silicones and oils (improve spreadability and reduce white cast); antioxidants like vitamin E (add photoprotection).
Use cautiously with
No major conflicts; however, nano-sized particles may require careful formulation to avoid settling or uneven coverage. Avoid combining with ingredients that promote photocatalytic activity if using in leave-on products.
Cautions
Micronized or nano-sized titanium dioxide particles have raised theoretical concerns about skin penetration, though current evidence suggests intact skin acts as an effective barrier; use non-nano grades for extra caution. May leave a white cast on darker skin tones; formulation with silicones or iron oxides can minimize this.
General information, not medical advice. Ingredient effects vary by formulation, concentration, and skin. Patch-test new actives and consult a qualified provider before starting prescription ingredients.

Know what's coming before your patients ask for it.

New actives, device launches, and the FDA calls that change what you can offer — distilled into a two-minute brief, twice a week. Inside MedSpa Pro.

Go Pro · $20/mo
Money Racket Pro

By the time it's news, the money's already moved.

The contract award, the executive order, the tariff cut — it mints winners before the financial press connects the dots. Pro gets you there first: what happened, who cashes in, and exactly what to watch — in a two-minute read.

Go Pro · $20/mo The policy-to-profit brief. Cancel anytime.
The twice-a-week profit brief Go Pro · $20/mo