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Renault turns industrial scale toward Europe’s defense needs
Renault has partnered with defense technology company Thales to develop a military vehicle, deepening the French carmaker’s push into the defense sector as Europe raises its security spending in response to the strategic challenges that have reshaped the continent’s priorities.
The companies plan to unveil a prototype called 4 TROOP at the Eurosatory defense fair near Paris, with Renault indicating it could fulfill a production order from early 2027, marking another step in the convergence of the automotive and defense industries that the era of rearmament is driving.
June 15, 2026 -
G7 summit tests crisis diplomacy in a fragmenting world
The Group of Seven wealthy nations gather Monday in the French lakeside resort of Evian-les-Bains for a summit dominated by the wars in Ukraine and Iran, the global economic imbalances threatening financial stability, and the accelerating rise of artificial intelligence, a confluence of crises that captures the extraordinary turbulence of the current moment and tests the relevance of a forum founded fifty years ago in response to an earlier energy crisis.
The summit convenes at a pivotal juncture, days after the US-Iran peace framework was announced but before its Friday signing, with the G7 leaders eager to understand the details of an accord whose implications ripple across every item on their agenda.
June 15, 2026 -
Aluminium slumps as Hormuz deal unwinds its crisis premium
Aluminum slumped to a two-month low as the US-Iran peace deal laid the groundwork for the resumption of metal shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, demonstrating how thoroughly the conflict had embedded a war risk premium into the metal that had become, alongside its energy correlation, the standout performer of the crisis.
Prices dropped as much as 3.3 percent in London as the two sides agreed to an interim deal, with the strait to reopen upon the agreement’s signing on Friday, though the details remain under negotiation and the durability of the arrangement is uncertain.
June 15, 2026 -
China’s retail slump exposes the weakness behind its trade boom
China’s consumer spending may have contracted for the first time since the pandemic, a setback that would extend a broadening slowdown in an economy whose momentum is faltering even as its trade booms, illustrating the persistent imbalance between China’s powerful export engine and its chronically weak domestic demand.
After a surprise acceleration to start the year, the world’s second-largest economy is cooling rapidly, with investment resuming its decline and consumption hobbled by a weak job market and the faster inflation that the Gulf conflict’s energy shock has produced, leaving retail sales estimated to have shrunk 0.2 percent in May from a year earlier.
June 15, 2026 -
Asia’s equity rally survives a record foreign exodus
A record exodus of foreign investors from Asian equities is unfolding against the backdrop of one of the region’s most powerful rallies, a divergence that would ordinarily signal trouble but that may, this time, represent merely a speed bump driven by the mechanics of portfolio rebalancing rather than a fundamental loss of confidence.
Foreign institutional investors have sold an unprecedented 134 billion dollars of emerging Asian equities in 2026 through June 12, including 78 billion in South Korea, 31 billion in India, and 22 billion in Taiwan, a figure that dwarfs the 45 billion sold in all of 2025 and exceeds even the selling during the 2008-09 global financial crisis.
June 15, 2026 -
Britain and Japan deepen their security technology alliance
Britain and Japan have announced a sweeping technology and security partnership designed to bolster national security and create jobs, pledging to accelerate their joint next-generation fighter jet program and committing to deeper cooperation across artificial intelligence, space, quantum computing, and cybersecurity.
The agreement, unveiled when Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi joined British Prime Minister Keir Starmer in London alongside business leaders, encompasses some twenty-four billion dollars in announcements spanning infrastructure, financial services, and wind power, reflecting the breadth of an alliance that both leaders framed as resting on a foundation of deep security ties.
June 15, 2026 -
Japan’s rare earth search reaches Greenland
Japan is preparing to send a delegation to Greenland this summer to evaluate possible rare earth extraction, in the latest step of Tokyo’s sustained effort to diversify its critical mineral supply chains away from Chinese dominance. The visit would include officials from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, trading companies, and the Japan Organization for Metals and Energy Security, who would hold talks with local government officials about the Arctic island’s potentially rich rare earth reserves.
The mission fits squarely within the comprehensive Japanese strategy to secure alternative rare earth supplies documented throughout the analysis of the critical minerals competition. Japan, having endured China’s cutoff of heavy rare earth exports for months as retaliation for the Taiwan dispute, has powerful motivation to develop sources of supply outside Chinese control.
June 15, 2026 -
Energy markets get relief, not resolution, from Hormuz deal
The United States and Iran have reached an agreement ending months of fighting and reopening the Strait of Hormuz, prompting a collective sigh of relief from energy exporters and importers alike, yet the fragile calm leaves unresolved the disputes that triggered the conflict and casts doubt over how quickly or fully tanker traffic through the vital waterway can return to normal.
Under the accord announced late Sunday, Iran and the United States agreed to lift their blockades on the strait through which roughly a fifth of global oil and LNG flowed before the war, with the reopening expected once both sides formally sign on Friday. After nearly four months of crisis, the agreement marks the beginning of the end of the acute supply shock, but it is a beginning shadowed by the structural vulnerabilities the conflict has exposed.
June 15, 2026
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