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China’s steel industry moves further into managed contraction
China’s steel sector has started the year on a weaker footing, with output falling in the first two months as mills responded to a more difficult demand environment and growing doubts about the usefulness of building inventories ahead of the usual spring pickup.
Crude steel production in January and February totaled about 160 million tons, down 3.6% from the same period a year earlier. While the combined two-month figure is always shaped by Lunar New Year disruptions and temporary anti-pollution controls around Beijing’s annual political meetings, this year’s decline also reflects something more fundamental: steel producers are becoming increasingly reluctant to keep running hard into a market where the underlying demand trend continues to deteriorate.
March 16, 2026 -
EU seeks emergency energy relief without breaking climate rules
The European Union is once again confronting a familiar problem in a new geopolitical setting: an external war has exposed how vulnerable the bloc remains to imported energy and to the price shocks that travel with it. EU energy ministers met on March 16 to discuss emergency responses after the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran drove a sharp rise in oil and gas prices, with Energy Commissioner Dan Jorgensen describing the situation bluntly as a “price crisis.”
Even though Brussels insists that physical oil and gas supplies remain secure because much of Europe’s energy now comes from the United States, Norway and other non-Middle Eastern suppliers, the core issue is that Europe still imports a large share of its energy and therefore remains highly exposed to global benchmark prices, even when molecules keep flowing.
March 16, 2026 -
Hormuz disruption pushes Asia’s fuel import dependence into crisis
The more dramatic headlines around the war with Iran have focused on the threat to crude oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, but the sharper and potentially faster-moving shock may be in Asia’s refined fuel system. The effective disruption of traffic through Hormuz is already pushing diesel, jet fuel and other product markets into severe stress, with Australia and Indonesia among the most exposed because of their heavy dependence on imported fuels.
Australia imports roughly 900,000 barrels a day of refined products and Indonesia about 600,000 barrels a day, making them the two biggest refined-fuel importers in Asia in this crisis. At the same time, benchmark Singapore gasoil and jet fuel prices have jumped dramatically since the conflict escalated, showing that the immediate bottleneck is not just crude availability but the availability of usable fuels for transport, industry and aviation.
March 16, 2026 -
Tantalum prices soar as DR Congo disruption hits a fragile market
European tantalite prices have jumped to about $200-$210/lb, up roughly 90% year to date and at their highest level since the 2000s. The immediate trigger is the disruption at the Rubaya columbite-tantalite mine in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo after a landslide earlier this month.
Congo produced more than 50% of global tantalum mine output in 2025, making any sustained disruption there hard for the market to absorb quickly. This is a classic critical-minerals squeeze: a concentrated, fragile supply chain colliding with a demand base that is still firm.
March 16, 2026 -
Germany’s chemicals industry hits breaking point as energy shocks compound
The German chemicals industry association’s unprecedented refusal to provide a 2026 outlook due to geopolitical uncertainty represents a devastating admission that Europe’s third-largest industrial sector employing half a million workers has reached a breaking point where the compounding pressures from years of high energy costs, bureaucratic burdens, Chinese competition, American tariffs, and now Middle Eastern supply destruction have overwhelmed any remaining capacity for adaptation or resilience.
The chemicals industry’s collapse would prove far more consequential than a typical sectoral downturn given its role as critical input supplier to automotive, construction, pharmaceuticals, agriculture, and countless other industries whose own viability depends on affordable, reliable access to the specialty chemicals, polymers, fertilizers, and industrial compounds that German producers historically provided.
March 16, 2026 -
Iran conflict tests whether markets learned the right lessons from Ukraine
The financial markets’ attempt to extract guidance from the 2022 Ukraine invasion playbook while navigating the Iran crisis reveals both instructive parallels and critical divergences that complicate efforts to forecast trajectories or calibrate portfolio strategies.
The fundamental similarity involves energy supply destruction triggering inflation acceleration amid fragile global growth, yet the differences in asset behavior suggest that either markets have learned to navigate geopolitical shocks more effectively or that crucial dynamics distinguishing the current crisis from Ukraine precedents will generate outcomes that historical comparisons cannot adequately predict.
March 16, 2026 -
Capital flees emerging markets as energy spike revives stagflation fears
The abrupt reversal of emerging market capital flows, from record inflows totaling $21 billion during January and February to $1.1 billion in weekly outflows representing the first drawdown since early January, captures how swiftly the Iran conflict’s energy price shock demolished the “goldilocks” conditions that had sustained a year-long rally across developing economy bonds, equities, and currencies.
The transformation from ideal investment environments characterized by weaker dollar dynamics, post-pandemic policy reforms, and competent central banking toward potential stagflation combining growth stagnation with inflation acceleration threatens to obliterate the progress that emerging markets achieved through years of structural adjustment.
March 16, 2026 -
White House broadens trade offensive with sweeping forced labor investigations
The Trump administration’s launch of Section 301 forced labor investigations targeting sixty countries spanning allies and adversaries alike, from Australia and the European Union through India and Qatar to China and Russia, represents transparent weaponization of legitimate human rights concerns to reconstruct the comprehensive tariff authority that the Supreme Court demolished when striking down global tariffs as illegal on February 20th.
The simultaneity with Wednesday’s excess industrial capacity investigations covering sixteen major trading partners reveals a systematic strategy to envelope virtually the entire global economy in overlapping procedural mechanisms that create maximum leverage for extracting trade concessions while manufacturing legal justifications for the protectionist barriers that judicial review previously invalidated.
March 16, 2026
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