Read Industry Insights
-
A Gulf ceasefire eases panic, not the energy damage
An Iran conflict ceasefire would bring immediate psychological and some physical relief to global energy markets, but it would not restore normality quickly. The market reaction already shows that traders are willing to price out some of the worst-case supply risk once fighting pauses: Brent fell sharply, equity markets rallied, and governments began talking again in terms of backlog clearance rather than outright emergency scarcity.
But the operational damage done over six weeks of conflict means the rebound in flows is likely to be slow, uneven, and fragile rather than clean or immediate. The first reason is that reopening Hormuz on paper is not the same as restoring confidence in using it.
April 8, 2026 -
Xi turns to services to strengthen China’s domestic demand
Xi Jinping’s latest call for a demand-led, reform-oriented, and technology-enabled expansion of China’s services sector is best understood as part of Beijing’s broader attempt to rebalance an economy that has become too dependent on manufacturing, infrastructure investment, and exports.
At the national service industry conference in Beijing, Xi emphasized upgrading the sector, building more “China service” brands, moving producer services further up the value chain, and combining domestic-demand growth with reform, technology, and openness.
April 8, 2026 -
EU prepares for lasting energy strain from Iran conflict
The European Commission is signaling that it sees the current energy shock as something more serious than a brief wartime price spike, pointing to the Strait of Hormuz as a major choke point for Europe’s fuel system. According to the Commission’s figures, around 8.5% of the EU’s LNG, 7% of its oil, and fully 40% of its jet fuel and diesel transit through Hormuz.
What makes that warning important is that Europe is not facing a simple repeat of the 2022 gas shock. Back then, the main vulnerability was Russian pipeline supply. This time, the exposure is broader and more indirect.
April 8, 2026 -
France boosts defense budget by €36B with focus on munitions and drones
France is undertaking its most significant defense spending overhaul in decades, directing a substantial portion of a thirty-six-billion-euro increase toward munitions stockpiling and drone acquisition as Paris recalibrates its military posture for a strategic environment defined by active wars on two fronts and growing doubt about the reliability of American security commitments to Europe.
The revised multi-year defense bill, presented to cabinet on Wednesday by Defense Minister Catherine Vautrin, allocates 8.5 billion euros to a fifty-four percent expansion in munitions spending and two billion euros specifically for drone programs, reflecting the two most urgent operational lessons drawn from the conflicts in Ukraine and the Persian Gulf.
April 8, 2026 -
China’s teapots go from regulatory nuisance to strategic asset
Beijing has granted China’s independent refineries additional crude oil import quotas in an emergency effort to maintain domestic fuel production at a moment when the Gulf conflict has disrupted global supply chains and threatened the energy security of the world’s largest oil importer.
The measure, implemented before the US-Iranian ceasefire announcement, comes with an explicit directive that the teapot refiners must sustain fuel output at 2025 levels, even if doing so means operating at a loss. As a further condition, the independent processors have been instructed to maintain current run rates for at least one month after the Strait of Hormuz reopens, ensuring that Beijing retains a production buffer during whatever uncertain transition period follows any diplomatic resolution.
April 8, 2026 -
Brent drops 15% but the oil market’s old assumptions are gone
Donald Trump’s rhetorical pivot from threatening the annihilation of Iranian civilization to proclaiming a historic day for world peace, executed within the span of twenty-four hours, has produced the most dramatic single-session oil price movement since the conflict began, with Brent crude plunging nearly fifteen percent to ninety-four dollars per barrel as financial markets rushed to price in the possibility of a restored Strait of Hormuz.
Yet beneath the headline relief lies a far more sobering assessment: even the most optimistic resolution of the US-Iranian conflict would leave the global energy system operating under conditions fundamentally different from those that prevailed before February 28, with structural damage, behavioral shifts, and risk repricing that will persist for years.
April 8, 2026 -
Oil futures price hope, but the tankers haven’t changed course yet
The announcement of a planned two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran has triggered the sharpest single-session drop in crude oil prices since the conflict began, with Brent futures plunging as much as sixteen percent to below ninety-two dollars per barrel in early Asian trading on Wednesday.
The selloff reflects a wave of market relief that President Trump’s incendiary threats to obliterate Iranian civilization have been shelved in favor of negotiations, and cautious optimism that a diplomatic process, scheduled to begin in Pakistan on Friday, could eventually lead to the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and the restoration of energy flows that have been largely severed for six weeks.
April 8, 2026 -
Zimbabwe imposes lithium export quotas to capture more value
Zimbabwe is tightening state control over its lithium sector by introducing export quotas on unprocessed concentrates and demanding that mining companies commit to building domestic processing facilities as a condition for resuming shipments.
The new requirements, communicated by the mines ministry in a letter to the country’s mining chamber, represent Harare’s most concrete step yet toward capturing greater value from a mineral resource that has until now been extracted and shipped almost entirely in raw form to Chinese processing plants.
April 8, 2026
Couldn't see what your are looking for?
Type any keywords to search our insights database.
Also use regional and sectoral filters in the top menu bar.
Explore Our Services
Get Top Insights Today
