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  • China’s teapots snap up discounted Gulf crude as Hormuz reopens

    China’s independent refiners are taking advantage of the cheaper Middle Eastern oil now flowing through the reopened Strait of Hormuz, snapping up barrels from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and the United Arab Emirates at discounts that undercut both their traditional long-haul spot suppliers and the Iranian crude that Tehran is desperately trying to sell, illustrating the fierce competition for the Chinese buyers that the post-conflict supply recovery has unleashed.

    The purchases by Rongsheng, Chambroad, and Shenghong, spanning Saudi spot cargoes, Iraqi Basrah grade, and Emirati Upper Zakum, reflect the teapots’ opportunistic response to the buyer’s market that the recovery of the Gulf exports has created.

    July 2, 2026
  • Iran struggles to sell crude before US window closes in August

    A hoard of Iranian oil is building up at sea as the Islamic Republic struggles to find buyers before the expiry of the sixty-day window granted by Washington, illustrating the paradox that even the sanctions relief that Tehran fought to obtain cannot easily overcome the market wariness, the ample supply, and the structural obstacles that stand between the Iranian crude and the revenue it represents.

    More than twenty million barrels have been idling in Asian waters for at least seven days, up nearly eighteen percent from a week earlier, with the estimates of the overall volume on water ranging from fifty-eight to sixty-eight million barrels since the waiver took effect, and more than ninety percent of these cargoes lacking any clear destination.

    July 2, 2026
  • EU’s China trade reset falters as members balk at cost of confrontation

    The European Union’s latest bid to reset its trade and economic relationship with China is already floundering, with the member states and officials involved in the planning skeptical that the bloc possesses the political will to take decisive action should the diplomacy fail, illustrating the fundamental paradox that has long characterized the European approach to Beijing: alignment on the severity of the threat combined with paralysis on the response.

    Despite the renewed campaign to take a tougher stance, the EU cannot agree on the tangible steps to fix a trade deficit exceeding 360 billion euros or to make its domestic industries competitive against the Chinese companies backed by the state subsidies.

    July 2, 2026
  • Beijing’s Taiwan pressure is building toward a 2028 flashpoint

    Something ominous is developing in the western Pacific, with the Chinese Coast Guard’s recent demands that ships in international waters near eastern Taiwan identify their points of origin and destination signaling Beijing’s assertion of a right to police the maritime traffic near Taiwan and potentially previewing a major crisis that could arrive within a year or two.

    The incident, in which China contacted three vessels without stopping them, represents the kind of incremental assertion of authority that could presage the customs quarantine scenario that analysts increasingly view as the most likely form of a coming Taiwan confrontation.

    July 2, 2026
  • Europe curtails record solar as storage, grids lag buildout

    Europe’s solar sector is scaling new heights, yet the region’s power markets are showing signs of growing stress, exposing a deepening mismatch between when the electricity is produced and when it is needed that is eroding the value of the clean power the continent has learned to generate so cheaply and abundantly.

    The paradox that Europe confronts, generating record solar output while capturing declining value from each unit produced, illustrates the central challenge of the transition’s next phase: integrating the clean power into a system that was not designed for it.

    July 2, 2026
  • LME bends rules to make Hong Kong a metals hub

    The London Metal Exchange is considering easing its rules, including allowing the outdoor storage of aluminum, to boost Hong Kong as a metals location, reflecting China’s drive for greater influence over the global metals markets and the exchange’s effort to accommodate its Hong Kong owner’s strategic ambitions.

    The proposed rule changes, addressing the practical barriers that have limited Hong Kong’s viability as a storage location, illustrate the intersection of the commercial considerations and the strategic dynamics as China seeks a bigger role in the global metals trading infrastructure that prices the commodities it consumes in vast quantities.

    July 2, 2026
  • US puts $500 million into homegrown fertilizer after Gulf shock

    The US Agriculture Secretary has announced 500 million dollars in new funding to expand domestic fertilizer production after the Gulf conflict drove up prices, illustrating the American effort to build the domestic capacity that would reduce the vulnerability to the import disruption that the conflict exposed.

    The funding, aimed at expanding the existing fertilizer plants and building new ones, reflects the recognition that the fertilizer supply security requires the domestic production that the conflict’s disruption of the Middle Eastern supply has made an urgent priority.

    July 2, 2026
  • US declines to extend USMCA, starting 10-year wind-down

    The Trump administration has declined to extend the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement, starting a decade-long clock to wind down the trade deal that underpins the highly integrated North American economy with its 1.6 trillion dollars in annual trilateral trade, as Washington seeks changes aimed at reshoring manufacturing jobs and reducing the persistent trade deficits with its neighbors.

    The decision, keeping the agreement in place for another ten years with annual reviews before it expires unless the three countries agree to renew it with changes, introduces a prolonged period of uncertainty over the future of the North American trade architecture that has structured the continental economy for decades.

    July 2, 2026

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