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  • Ras Laffan goes silent, Qatar LNG exports halt five days

    Qatar’s Ras Laffan complex going five days without an LNG cargo leaving is a rare kind of signal: not a price spike driven by fear, but a measurable breakdown in the physical flow of molecules from the world’s most important LNG export node. No loaded tanker has departed in five days, the longest such pause in data back to 2008, and no LNG carrier has transited the Strait of Hormuz since Feb. 28, when the US and Israel began strikes on Iran.

    The background is that LNG is far less reroutable than oil in a crisis. Crude can sometimes be diverted, swapped, stored, and blended; LNG is constrained by liquefaction trains, specialized ships, receiving terminals, and contract structures.

    March 11, 2026
  • Private credit’s first real stress test is underway

    Private credit is starting to exhibit the same early-warning characteristics that subprime mortgage funds displayed in 2007: gated redemptions, vanishing liquidity, and an uncomfortable gap between what assets are marked at and what they might fetch in a stressed sale.

    The point isn’t that a 2008-style collapse is preordained, but that the market is entering a phase where confidence in valuations and liquidity is being tested, and that test can spill from private vehicles into public markets once investors begin treating “private” risk as not actually contained.

    March 11, 2026
  • Iran conflict inflation shock tests the plumbing of market-based finance

    Central banks are looking at the Iran-war oil shock through three lenses at once, and that the third lens, financial stability, is the one markets tend to underprice until it suddenly matters. The first lens is the obvious one: higher energy costs feeding into headline inflation and inflation expectations.

    The second is the classic macro follow-through: whether the same shock that raises prices also crushes demand enough to cool inflation later, or, in the nastiest version, does both at once, lifting inflation while weakening growth and employment.

    March 11, 2026
  • India’s small steel mills face gas cuts as LNG shock spreads

    India’s smaller steelmakers are being squeezed from both sides of the fuel stack at once, and that combination is exactly what turns an external geopolitical shock into domestic industrial rationing. In Gujarat, where many secondary mills rely on imported LNG, the immediate problem is physical availability: local gas distributors have declared force majeure and are curtailing industrial supplies.

    That is forcing operators to contemplate drastic output cuts within days, not months, because gas-based direct reduced iron (DRI) plants and downstream furnaces are continuous processes that become uneconomic, or simply impossible to run, once feed gas is interrupted. Some Gujarat producers warn of a 50% cut now and a full halt if supply doesn’t improve within a week.

    March 11, 2026
  • LME aluminium cancellations surge as Gulf shock turns into physical shortage

    The sudden wave of cancellations in London Metal Exchange (LME) aluminium inventories is the clearest sign yet that the Middle East war has shifted from being a “price story” to being a physical availability and logistics story for Western metal buyers.

    Almost 40% of LME stocks are now earmarked for withdrawal, and the epicenter is Port Klang, Malaysia, where 98,150 tons of warranted aluminium were cancelled on Monday, meaning it has been reserved to leave the LME system. The immediate market inference from industry sources is that this metal is being mobilized toward destinations that are suddenly short because the Strait of Hormuz has become effectively unusable for shipping, stranding Gulf supply.

    March 11, 2026
  • Southeast Asia refineries shift into crisis mode as Hormuz paralysis bites

    Refiners in Southeast Asia are now starting to behave like utilities in a blackout: conserving feedstock, triaging units, and prioritizing operational safety over commercial optimization. The proximate cause is straightforward. As the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran has rendered the Strait of Hormuz commercially non-navigable for large portions of shipping, crude cargoes that normally feed Asian refineries are arriving late, rerouting, or not arriving at all.

    Because refineries are continuous, tightly scheduled systems rather than flexible batch plants, “crude delivery delays” quickly become throughput cuts, and throughput cuts quickly become knock-on shutdowns in downstream units like crackers and catalytic crackers that depend on steady flows of intermediate streams.

    March 11, 2026
  • Diesel becomes the conflict’s fastest route into global inflation

    Diesel is becoming the most dangerous transmission channel from the Middle East war into the real economy because it sits at the intersection of logistics, food production, mining, and industrial activity, and the conflict is tightening both the supply of diesel itself and the availability of the crude grades that maximize diesel yields.

    The market is effectively repricing the “workhorse barrel” of the global economy, not just crude oil. That is why traders are describing diesel as structurally more exposed than gasoline: it is more globally traded, more essential to freight and agriculture, and harder to substitute quickly without either cost inflation or outright demand destruction.

    March 11, 2026
  • Stranded tankers expose Japan’s Middle East energy dependence

    Japan’s energy-security debate has been jolted back to first principles by the effective shutdown of tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. The Renewable Energy Institute argues the crisis is exposing how quickly an import-dependent economy can lose economic autonomy when maritime supply lines seize up.

    The blunt formulation is that when fossil fuel imports are interrupted, the power plants stop and cars stop running, and the Iran war is a live demonstration of that vulnerability rather than an abstract stress test.

    March 11, 2026

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