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  • Asian refiners pay wartime premiums for accessible Gulf crude

    Asian refiners are now bidding extraordinary premiums for the few Middle Eastern crude barrels that can still be loaded outside the Strait of Hormuz, and that tells a great deal about how severe the physical market dislocation has become. Some refiners offered as much as $20 a barrel above ADNOC’s official price for Upper Zakum cargoes available near Fujairah, while traders said bids for May-loading barrels were at least $5 above the official selling price.

    That is highly unusual because term buyers normally lift their contracted ADNOC volumes at official prices rather than paying extra. The fact that they are now willing to do so shows that buyers are no longer treating Gulf crude as a normal monthly supply stream. They are treating any accessible barrel as scarce strategic inventory.

    May 4, 2026
  • ADB’s $70 billion plan aims to rewire Asia’s power and digital links

    The Asian Development Bank’s new $70 billion connectivity push is best understood as an attempt to tackle two of Asia’s biggest structural bottlenecks at the same time: fragmented energy systems and uneven digital infrastructure.

    The program, announced at the ADB’s annual meeting in Samarkand, will run through 2035 and is split between a $50 billion Pan-Asia Power Grid Initiative and a $20 billion digital-connectivity effort. The stated aim is to strengthen cross-border power links, increase electricity trade, and expand broadband access across the region.

    May 4, 2026
  • Ford’s lightweight truck strategy runs into a hard aluminum reality

    Ford’s aluminum-heavy truck strategy, once one of the company’s biggest engineering advantages, is now turning into one of its clearest cost and supply vulnerabilities. The immediate problem is not a collapse in demand. It is that a sharp global tightening in aluminum supply, worsened by the Iran war, U.S. tariff policy, and production disruptions at a key supplier, is constraining the availability of the metal that underpins Ford’s most important profit engine: the F-Series pickup franchise.

    Ford has doubled its expected 2026 commodity-cost headwind to $2 billion, with aluminum a major driver, while disruptions at Novelis’ Oswego, New York, plant have continued to weigh on truck production and inventories.

    May 4, 2026
  • OPEC+ signals survival, but Asia’s import collapse shows the real oil crisis

    OPEC+’s latest decision to raise June output looks meaningless if judged only by near-term physical supply. The seven remaining members still subject to voluntary cuts agreed to lift production targets by 188,000 barrels a day in June, marking a third consecutive monthly increase. But as long as the Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed, those extra barrels cannot materially ease the market because so much Gulf crude is still unable to reach buyers.

    That is precisely why the move matters politically. The increase is a signal, not a solution. After the UAE’s exit from OPEC and OPEC+, the group is trying to show two things at once: that it still exists as an organized supply-management bloc without Abu Dhabi, and that it intends to preserve its role as a market balancer once the war ends and Gulf export routes reopen.

    May 4, 2026
  • Investors underprice the physical oil market’s signals

    Investors are still behaving as though the Iran war is a severe but ultimately containable commodity shock, when the physical oil market is already signaling something more dangerous: a sustained disruption that financial markets have not fully priced. While the S&P 500 has continued to set record highs on the back of AI enthusiasm and robust earnings, physical crude prices have climbed to around $130 a barrel for key grades such as Forties, Cabinda, and Troll, roughly 70% above late-February levels.

    By contrast, Brent futures have been trading materially lower, recently around the low-$110s, with longer-dated contracts showing a far smaller move. That divergence matters because it suggests investors are still treating the conflict as temporary, even while the market for actual deliverable barrels is reflecting a much tighter real-world supply picture.

    May 4, 2026
  • U.S. LNG becomes Asia’s emergency gas lifeline after Gulf disruption

    U.S. LNG exports to Asia are rising sharply because American cargoes have become one of the few flexible replacement sources available after the Iran war curtailed Middle Eastern gas supply. Shipments from the U.S. to Asia climbed from about 970,000 metric tons in February to 1.99 million tons in March and 2.71 million tons in April, meaning they have risen by more than 175% since the conflict began. In April, nearly a quarter of all U.S. LNG exports went to Asia.

    The immediate reason is price and availability. Asian buyers have had to compete for flexible cargoes because Gulf supply has been disrupted, and the Asia premium remained high enough to attract more Atlantic Basin LNG eastward. The Japan-Korea Marker averaged $17.92 per mmBtu in April, compared with $15.34 for Europe’s TTF benchmark, leaving Asia about 17% more expensive on average even after both benchmarks eased from March levels.

    May 4, 2026
  • Japan turns to Vietnam to build a more resilient Indo-Pacific economy

    Japan’s outreach to Vietnam is part of a broader attempt to turn economic security into a central pillar of Indo-Pacific strategy. During Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s visit to Hanoi, Japan and Vietnam agreed to deepen their 2023 Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, with particular emphasis on energy, critical minerals, semiconductors, AI, and space.

    Takaichi described economic security as a new priority area for bilateral cooperation, while Japan’s foreign ministry said the two sides confirmed closer cooperation on supply-chain resilience and strategic industries.

    May 4, 2026
  • Australia and Japan turn energy and minerals into strategic alliance

    Australia and Japan are deepening their partnership in energy and critical minerals at a moment when both countries are trying to insulate themselves from a far more unstable global supply environment. During Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s visit to Australia, the two sides agreed to strengthen cooperation on energy security, food security, and critical minerals supply chains, building on a landmark defense agreement reached last month.

    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the purpose was to protect both economies from future shocks and uncertainty, while Australia supplies roughly one-third of Japan’s energy and remains Japan’s largest LNG source.

    May 4, 2026

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