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China becomes net petrochemical exporter as Gulf conflict disrupts supply
The Gulf conflict has fundamentally rewired China’s petrochemicals trade, allowing the country’s plants to ease their chronic overcapacity glut by dramatically boosting exports to Asian buyers desperate for alternatives to the disrupted Middle Eastern supply.
This transformation, potentially outlasting the conflict itself, offers Chinese producers a vital solution to the overcapacity problem that has plagued their industry, illustrating how the disruption to the traditional supply routes has created an opportunity for China to establish the export channels that could prove durable even after the conflict resolves.
July 1, 2026 -
Mega-deals push global M&A to a record $2.8 trillion
A surge in ten-billion-dollar-plus mega-deals has driven global mergers and acquisitions to record levels in the first half of 2026, with companies taking advantage of an easier regulatory backdrop to pursue what advisers describe as their dream deals, illustrating a striking bifurcation in the M&A market between the blockbuster transactions that are dominating the headlines and the overall deal count that has actually declined.
The total value of announced deals hit 2.8 trillion dollars in the first six months, up forty-eight percent year-on-year and the highest year-to-date total since records began in 1980, even as the number of deals announced fell nine percent to 24,000, a six-year low.
July 1, 2026 -
Copper-aluminum price ratio hits record 4.3, spurs switch
The spike in copper prices to a record high earlier this year has added significant weight to the arguments for switching from copper to the cheaper and lighter aluminum across a range of sectors, illustrating how the extraordinary copper price surge that the AI-driven demand and the broader supply constraints have produced is now driving a substitution trend that spans the automotive, electrical, and heating industries.
This substitution dynamic, driven by the widening price gap between the two metals, illustrates the market’s response to the copper price spike, with the manufacturers increasingly turning to the aluminum alternative that offers a compelling cost advantage despite its technical limitations.
July 1, 2026 -
Europe tightens steel imports while shielding trade partners
The European Commission has unveiled the quotas under its new system to limit duty-free steel imports into the EU, slashing the annual tariff-free import quotas by forty-seven percent to 18.3 million tons while introducing a fifty percent out-of-quota duty for twenty-six categories of steel products, in a significant escalation of the European response to the global steel overcapacity that has damaged the bloc’s domestic industry.
The rules, aimed at increasing the steel capacity utilization to eighty percent, represent one of the most substantial European interventions to protect its steel sector from the overcapacity and dumping that the Commission has identified as a serious global problem distorting the international markets.
July 1, 2026 -
US moves to ban Chinese solar inverters over grid-hacking fears
The Trump administration is drafting a ban on foreign inverters, the devices that connect solar projects and batteries to the grid, over concerns that China could use them to disrupt power supplies, illustrating the revival of the technology security concerns that had paused during the earlier detente with Beijing and the broader alignment between the United States and Europe on the China technology threat.
The restriction, being drafted by the Federal Communications Commission and potentially published as early as this year, targets the new foreign inverter models, reflecting the security concerns that the Chinese dominance of the inverter market has raised.
July 1, 2026 -
Stocks add $7 trillion in 2026 despite historic geopolitical shocks
Global investors have weathered an extraordinary year of turmoil, with the shock of the Gulf conflict clashing against an unstoppable AI-driven boom, producing a striking outcome in which global stocks now stand seven trillion dollars higher than at the end of 2025, despite the conflict having caused a nine trillion dollar drop in March when oil reached 120 dollars per barrel.
This resilience, remarkable given the magnitude of the geopolitical shock, illustrates the extraordinary capacity of the markets to absorb even one of the most significant disruptions imaginable while continuing to be propelled by the AI enthusiasm that has dominated the investment landscape.
July 1, 2026 -
India cuts fuel export duties as oil prices retreat
India has adjusted its windfall taxes on fuel exports in response to the easing oil prices, lowering the duties on diesel and aviation turbine fuel while raising the duty on petrol exports, illustrating the recalibration of the fiscal policy as the market normalizes from the conflict’s disruption.
The adjustments, reducing the diesel and jet fuel duties while increasing the petrol duty to ensure domestic supply, reflect the Indian government’s fine-tuning of the windfall tax regime as the oil market transitions from the conflict’s scarcity toward the recovery’s more normal conditions.
July 1, 2026 -
Lithium, cobalt, nickel rebound rests on policy, not demand
The battery metals bust has run its course, with lithium, cobalt, and nickel all recovering from their 2024-2025 lows, largely through the supply restraint that Congo, Indonesia, and Chinese authorities have imposed on their respective markets.
Yet this recovery remains very much a work in progress, with the immediate price evolution beholden to the policymakers in Kinshasa, Jakarta, and China’s Jiangxi province, even as some of the previous gloom has lifted and the focus turns to whether the demand is strong enough to sustain the higher price levels.
July 1, 2026
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