Connect with us

Asia

The Contours of 21st-Century Geopolitics Will Become Clearer in 2026: A New World Is Starting to Emerge

Published

on

geopolitics
Spread the love

The world stands at an inflection point. As 2026 unfolds, the post-Cold War order that shaped global affairs for three decades is giving way to something fundamentally different. This isn’t just another year of geopolitical tensions—it’s the moment when the emerging world order crystallizes into recognizable contours, reshaping how businesses operate, how nations interact, and how power itself is distributed across the planet.

The evidence is everywhere. Nearly 75% of CEOs have either localized or are localizing some part of their production within the country of sale, while just over half are reorganizing supply chains to serve particular regional blocs. The multipolar world has solidified, and 2026 will be the year we see its architecture clearly defined.

The Architecture of a New World Order

Three fundamental shifts are converging to create this new geopolitical landscape. First, economic sovereignty has replaced free-market globalization as the dominant paradigm. Second, technological competition—particularly in artificial intelligence and semiconductors—has become inseparable from national security. Third, resource geopolitics centered on critical minerals and energy is redefining which nations hold strategic leverage.

These aren’t isolated trends. They’re interconnected forces creating what analysts call a “geopolitics of scarcity” where access to technology, minerals, and capital will determine winners and losers in the 21st century. For business leaders, policymakers, and investors, understanding these dynamics isn’t optional—it’s existential.

Economic Realignment: The End of Rules-Based Trade

The architecture of global commerce is undergoing its most dramatic transformation since the establishment of the Bretton Woods system in 1944. The world economy isn’t collapsing, but it is fundamentally reorganizing around new principles where national security trumps economic efficiency.

Key Takeaways:

  • Economic sovereignty has replaced free-market efficiency as the organizing principle of global trade
  • BRICS expansion to 11 members accounting for 40% of global GDP signals genuine power redistribution
  • China controls 70% average market share in refining 19 of 20 critical minerals, creating strategic vulnerabilities
  • AI and technological competition have become inseparable from national security concerns
  • 75% of CEOs are localizing production, reflecting permanent supply chain restructuring
  • Multipolarity is creating overlapping regional blocs rather than a return to Cold War bipolarity
  • Investment must now incorporate geopolitical risk analysis as central to decision-making

The Dawn of Economic Blocs

The BRICS bloc now accounts for 40% of the global economy measured by purchasing power parity, with projections rising to 41% in 2025. The group’s expansion to eleven full members—including Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates—represents more than geopolitical posturing. It signals a wholesale reconfiguration of trade flows, investment patterns, and financial architecture.

But BRICS expansion is just one dimension of this fragmentation. With the 2025 expansion, the BRICS group is forecast to account for 58% of GDP growth from 2024 to 2029, while the G7’s share of GDP growth is expected to decline to around 25%. This isn’t merely about emerging markets growing faster—it’s about structural power shifting from the traditional centers of global capitalism.

The North American operating environment exemplifies these tensions. The US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) review is reshaping regional supply chains, forcing companies to recalculate decades of cross-border investment. Meanwhile, Europe faces its own reckoning as internal divisions deepen over defense spending, energy policy, and fiscal coordination.

De-Dollarization: Threat or Mirage?

Perhaps no trend captures more attention—or generates more confusion—than efforts to challenge the US dollar’s dominance. BRICS has launched initiatives like BRICS Pay and the BRICS Bridge to facilitate trade in local currencies and bypass SWIFT, with a new BRICS currency backed by commodities like gold and oil under discussion.

The reality is more nuanced than the headlines suggest. The dollar still accounts for nearly half of global payments and maintains unmatched liquidity and legal certainty. However, the direction of travel is unmistakable. Russia and India settling oil transactions in rupees, China expanding yuan-denominated trade, and multiple nations building payment systems outside the dollar infrastructure—these moves represent incremental but irreversible shifts.

For businesses, this creates immediate complexity. Companies must now navigate multiple currency zones, maintain relationships with banks in different jurisdictions, and hedge against currency risks that were previously negligible. The era of frictionless dollar-based global commerce is ending.

Trade Policy as Weapon

Governments are enacting new trade policies—including tariffs, export controls and local content requirements—to mandate or incentivize companies to modify existing supply chains and trade patterns. What began as targeted measures has evolved into comprehensive industrial strategies where every major economy is using trade tools to reshape domestic manufacturing.

The International Monetary Fund projects global growth at 3.2% in 2025 and 3.1% in 2026—below the pre-pandemic average of 3.7%. This slower growth reflects the friction costs of fragmenting supply chains. Companies face higher expenses, longer lead times, and reduced economies of scale. Yet these inefficiencies are deemed acceptable costs for enhanced economic security.

Technological Sovereignty: The New Strategic Frontier

If the 20th century’s geopolitical battles were fought over territory and resources, the 21st century’s defining contests will be won or lost in the realm of technology. And 2026 is when this competition intensifies to unprecedented levels.

The AI Arms Race Accelerates

Governments are increasingly treating AI assets as a national security priority and an important piece of critical infrastructure, with AI serving as a force multiplier of cyber conflicts. This transformation from commercial technology to strategic asset has profound implications.

The United States and China dominate this landscape, but their approaches diverge sharply. America relies on private-sector innovation led by tech giants, while China pursues state-directed development with tighter integration between commercial and military applications. DeepSeek’s surprise emergence in January 2025—releasing a reasoning model competitive with the most advanced US systems but at significantly lower development costs—demonstrated that assumptions about insurmountable American leads were premature.

For businesses, AI competition creates a minefield of compliance requirements. Export controls determine which companies can access cutting-edge chips. Data localization laws restrict where AI training can occur. Governments impose requirements on which AI systems can be deployed in critical infrastructure. The result is what analysts call a “two-speed AI ecosystem”: giants capable of navigating regulatory complexity across jurisdictions, and smaller firms confined to single markets or dependent on platforms controlled by others.

The Semiconductor Chokepoint

Nothing illustrates technological interdependence—and vulnerability—more starkly than semiconductors. Taiwan produces the majority of the world’s most advanced chips. The Netherlands’ ASML holds a near-monopoly on extreme ultraviolet lithography machines essential for cutting-edge production. The United States dominates chip design and specialized manufacturing equipment.

This concentration creates acute geopolitical risk. Any disruption to Taiwan’s production would cascade through global supply chains, affecting everything from smartphones to fighter jets. Nations are responding with massive investment in domestic semiconductor manufacturing, but building fabs requires years and faces immense technical barriers.

Water scarcity adds another dimension. Data centers and semiconductor manufacturing consume vast quantities of water. As freshwater scarcity grows worldwide and demand for water increases for semiconductor manufacturing and cooling data centers, more water rights conflicts will arise. Geography and geology—not just technology and capital—will determine which nations can sustain advanced manufacturing.

Digital Sovereignty and Data Balkanization

The free flow of data that underpinned the digital economy is fragmenting into national and regional silos. The European Union’s data protection regime, China’s cybersecurity laws, and emerging frameworks across dozens of countries create incompatible requirements for how data is collected, processed, and stored.

This “splinternet” imposes real costs. Companies must maintain separate infrastructure for different markets. Cloud providers face restrictions on where they can locate data centers and which customers they can serve. The seamless global digital infrastructure of the 2010s is being replaced by a patchwork of national digital territories.

Critical Minerals: The New Oil

Energy dominated geopolitics for a century. In 2026, critical minerals are assuming that role—with even higher stakes because alternatives are scarcer and concentration is more extreme.

China’s Commanding Heights

For 19 out of 20 important strategic minerals, China is the leading refiner with an average market share of 70%. This dominance extends beyond refining to manufacturing. China’s share of sintered permanent magnet production—magnets used in electric vehicles, wind turbines, industrial motors, data centers and defense systems—has risen from around 50% two decades ago to 94% today.

Beijing has demonstrated willingness to weaponize this control. In April 2025, China introduced export controls on seven heavy rare earth elements. By October, these controls expanded to include five additional elements and equipment for processing rare earths. Most significantly, from December 2025 onward, controls extend to internationally manufactured products containing Chinese-sourced materials or technologies.

The implications are staggering. Defense contractors, automotive manufacturers, renewable energy companies, and consumer electronics firms all depend on supply chains that flow through China. Even when minerals are mined elsewhere, they typically travel to China for refining and processing.

The Race for Diversification

Between 2020 and 2024, growth in refined material production was heavily concentrated among leading suppliers, with the average market share of the top three refining nations of key energy minerals rising from around 82% in 2020 to 86% in 2024. Concentration is increasing, not decreasing, despite years of stated diversification goals.

The obstacles are formidable. Building a rare earth processing facility requires years of permitting, billions in investment, and expertise concentrated in a handful of companies. Environmental regulations in many countries make domestic processing challenging. The economics favor continuing reliance on Chinese infrastructure even as the geopolitical risks mount.

Countries are pursuing multiple strategies. The United States signed an $8.5 billion rare earths agreement with Australia. Africa’s cobalt-copper belt in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zambia is seeing expanded investment. Gulf states are positioning themselves as critical partners through infrastructure investments across multiple continents.

Yet even aggressive expansion may not bear fruit quickly enough. Given the long lead times for development of critical mineral mining, processing and manufacturing assets, even aggressive expansion of new, de-risked supply chain activity may not yet protect the United States from a severe supply chain disruption.

Resource Nationalism and Strategic Stockpiling

Producing nations are asserting greater control over their mineral wealth. In February 2025, the Democratic Republic of Congo announced a four-month suspension of cobalt exports to curb falling prices. More than half of energy-related minerals now face some form of export controls.

This resource nationalism creates a paradox: nations seeking to secure supply chains face restrictions from the very countries they’re trying to partner with. The result is a complex negotiation where access to minerals is traded for technology transfer, infrastructure investment, and geopolitical alignment.

Institutional Reordering: From Multilateralism to Minilateralism

The international institutions built after World War II and expanded after the Cold War are struggling to adapt to this multipolar reality. 2026 will see these pressures intensify as nations seek alternatives that better reflect current power distributions.

The BRICS Alternative

The New Development Bank is expected to play a key role in providing investment flows into BRICS countries through loans and credit arrangements that may be given at relatively modest interest rates and near condition-free financing. This represents an alternative to the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, institutions often criticized for imposing stringent conditions.

The BRICS Contingent Reserve Arrangement, with $100 billion in capital, provides emergency liquidity without requiring countries to first seek IMF assistance. These parallel institutions don’t replace Western-dominated frameworks, but they provide options that didn’t exist a decade ago.

Regional Blocs Strengthen

While global institutions fracture, regional frameworks are gaining strength. The African Continental Free Trade Area creates a market of 1.3 billion people. The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership links fifteen Asia-Pacific economies. The European Union, despite internal tensions, remains the world’s largest single market.

These regional architectures will be the building blocks of the emerging order. Rather than a single global system, we’re moving toward overlapping regional spheres with variable geometry—some nations participating in multiple blocs, others forced to choose between incompatible frameworks.

Middle Powers Navigate

Countries like South Korea, Indonesia, Vietnam, and the UAE face a delicate balancing act. They seek to maintain economic relationships with both China and the West while avoiding being forced into binary choices. ASEAN countries are particularly adept at this balancing approach due to their intertwined commercial and strategic interests with both Washington and Beijing.

This “strategic autonomy” represents a distinct approach from Cold War non-alignment. These nations aren’t staying neutral—they’re actively engaging with multiple power centers, extracting concessions and maintaining flexibility. The success of this strategy depends on major powers tolerating such flexibility rather than demanding exclusive alignment.

Energy Transition Meets Geopolitical Reality

The transformation of global energy systems is accelerating even as geopolitical fragmentation complicates the transition. This creates tensions between climate ambitions and national security imperatives.

The Green Energy Paradox

Renewable energy reduces dependence on oil and gas but creates new dependencies on critical minerals and manufacturing capacity. Solar panels, wind turbines, and electric vehicle batteries require materials that flow through concentrated supply chains. The energy transition, rather than reducing geopolitical competition, is redirecting it toward new chokepoints.

With Saudi Arabia, Iran, and UAE as BRICS members, the bloc now controls over 40% of global crude oil production and produces 32% of global natural gas output. Traditional energy producers aren’t being displaced—they’re repositioning themselves for the new energy landscape while maintaining leverage from hydrocarbon production.

Petrostates Pivot

Gulf nations are using oil revenues to invest heavily in renewable energy, positioning themselves as future clean energy hubs. The UAE’s massive solar installations and green hydrogen projects exemplify this strategy. These investments aren’t just about diversification—they’re about maintaining geopolitical relevance in a decarbonizing world.

Russia and Iran face different calculations. Heavily dependent on fossil fuel exports and facing sanctions, they have fewer options for managed transition. This creates potential for disruption if energy markets shift faster than these economies can adapt.

What This Means for Business

The emerging world order fundamentally changes how companies must operate. The era of optimizing purely for efficiency is over. Resilience, redundancy, and regional adaptation are now strategic imperatives.

Supply Chain Transformation

Companies cannot rely on single-source suppliers, even if they offer the lowest costs. Building resilient supply chains means accepting higher expenses and reduced margins in exchange for greater security. The 75% of CEOs localizing production represents recognition that globalization’s golden age has ended.

This doesn’t mean complete de-globalization. Rather, it’s “selective reglobalization”—maintaining international networks while building regional capabilities and reducing critical dependencies. The challenge is identifying which components require local sourcing and which can remain globally sourced.

Navigating Regulatory Complexity

Businesses face conflicting requirements across jurisdictions. Export controls, data localization, local content rules, and cybersecurity mandates often contradict each other. Companies need compliance architectures that can adapt to rapidly changing rules while maintaining operational continuity.

Small and medium enterprises face particular challenges. The cost of navigating multiple regulatory regimes may exceed their capacity, forcing difficult choices between markets or dependence on larger platforms.

Investment Priorities Shift

Capital allocation must now incorporate geopolitical risk analysis alongside traditional financial metrics. Questions that were once peripheral—political stability, resource security, regulatory trajectory—are now central to investment decisions.

The IMF projects global growth at 3.2% in 2025 and 3.1% in 2026, with advanced economies expected to grow around 1.5-1.6% while emerging markets hold above 4%. This divergence reflects the structural shift toward emerging economies even as mature markets face the costs of adjustment.

The Year Ahead: Five Critical Developments

As 2026 progresses, several key developments will clarify the emerging order’s contours:

1. US-China Coexistence Framework: Despite competition, both powers recognize the need for managed coexistence. Trade agreements and summit outcomes will signal whether they can establish predictable parameters or whether relations deteriorate further.

2. BRICS Institutional Deepening: The bloc will test whether its expanded membership can translate into effective coordination. Progress on payment systems, the New Development Bank’s lending, and joint infrastructure projects will indicate whether BRICS becomes a functional alternative or remains primarily symbolic.

3. Critical Minerals Diplomacy: Deals between major economies and resource-rich nations will reveal which partnerships can actually deliver diversified supply chains. The gap between announced agreements and operational supply is the measure that matters.

4. AI Governance Fragmentation: Attempts at harmonized AI standards will collide with national security imperatives. The AI Action Summit outcomes will show whether any degree of international coordination is possible or whether complete fragmentation is inevitable.

5. Regional Bloc Consolidation: Economic integration within regions—Africa, Southeast Asia, Latin America—will either accelerate or stall based on whether nations can overcome internal divisions and present coherent alternatives to China or Western-led frameworks.

Preparing for the Post-2026 World

The multipolar world emerging in 2026 won’t be stable or comfortable. It will be characterized by persistent tensions, periodic crises, and the constant need to adapt to shifting alignments. Yet it also creates opportunities for those who can navigate complexity.

For Business Leaders

Success requires abandoning assumptions of stable global rules and embracing radical flexibility. Scenario planning must incorporate geopolitical disruptions as baseline expectations rather than tail risks. Building optionality—alternative suppliers, regional operations, flexible logistics—becomes as important as optimizing existing operations.

Partnerships with governments will be essential. Companies that align with national priorities on supply chain resilience, technology development, or resource security will find support. Those that resist state priorities will face increasing pressure.

For Policymakers

The challenge is managing competition without triggering outright conflict. Maintaining channels for dialogue, establishing guardrails for rivalry, and finding areas for cooperation even amid strategic competition will determine whether multipolarity leads to relative stability or devastating confrontation.

Middle powers have particular opportunities and responsibilities. By maintaining connections across blocs and refusing to accept false binaries, they can preserve some degree of system-wide integration even as major powers pursue strategic separation.

For Investors

Understanding geopolitical trajectories becomes as crucial as analyzing balance sheets. Sectors like defense, cybersecurity, semiconductor manufacturing, and critical minerals processing will see sustained investment regardless of short-term market conditions. Companies with regional footprints matching emerging bloc structures will outperform those tied to fading global models.

Conclusion: A World Being Remade

The contours of 21st-century geopolitics are indeed becoming clearer in 2026, but clarity doesn’t mean simplicity. We’re witnessing the most significant restructuring of the international system since the Cold War ended—arguably since the post-World War II order was established.

This isn’t returning to Cold War bipolarity. The multipolar world taking shape is more fluid, with multiple centers of power, overlapping institutions, and nations maintaining diverse relationships across blocs. Technology rather than ideology drives competition, though values still matter. Economic interdependence hasn’t disappeared but is being restructured around security concerns.

As Morgan Stanley describes 2026: “The Year of Risk Reboot,” a period where market focus shifts from macro anxieties to micro fundamentals. Yet underneath that shift, the fundamental architecture of global commerce, technology, and power continues its dramatic transformation.

For decades, globalization seemed inevitable—an unstoppable force of markets and technology integration. Now we understand it was a particular configuration of geopolitical conditions that has ended. What replaces it will be shaped by the choices leaders make in 2026 and the years immediately following.

The new world emerging isn’t inherently worse than what came before, but it will be different in fundamental ways. Success in this environment requires understanding that change, accepting its permanence, and adapting strategies accordingly. Those who cling to the old world’s assumptions will find themselves increasingly unable to operate effectively. Those who recognize the new contours and position themselves accordingly will find opportunities others miss.

2026 is the year the fog lifts and we see the new landscape clearly. What we do with that clarity will determine whether this transition leads to a more balanced international system or to deeper instability. The choice isn’t whether to accept this new world—it’s already here. The question is how we navigate it.

Acquisitions

The Saigol Pivot: Inside Maple Leaf Cement’s Strategic Incursion into Pakistan’s Banking Sector

Published

on

maple leaf
Spread the love

It is a move that initially appears as a study in industrial asymmetry: a northern cement giant, whose fortunes are tied to construction gypsum and clinker, systematically acquiring a stake in one of the country’s mid-tier Islamic banks. But beneath the surface of the Competition Commission of Pakistan’s (CCP) recent authorization lies a narrative far more sophisticated than a simple portfolio shuffle. This is the Saigol family’s Kohinoor Maple Leaf Group (KMLG) executing a deliberate financial pivot, threading the needle between regulatory scrutiny and the volatile realities of the 2026 Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) .

The CCP’s green light for Maple Leaf Cement Factory Limited (MLCF) to acquire shares in Faysal Bank Limited (FABL)—including a rare ex post facto approval for purchases made during 2025—offers a window into the evolving strategy of Pakistan’s old industrial guard .

The “Grey Area”: A Regulatory Slap on the Wrist?

In the sterile language of antitrust law, the transaction raised no red flags. The CCP’s Phase I assessment correctly noted the “entirely distinct” nature of cement manufacturing and commercial banking, concluding there was no horizontal or vertical overlap that could stifle competition .

However, the procedural backstory is where the texture lies. The Commission acknowledged reviewing a batch of open-market transactions on the PSX that were “already completed prior to obtaining the Commission’s approval” .

While the CCP granted ex-post facto authorization under Section 31(1)(d)(i) of the Competition Act 2010, it simultaneously issued a pointed directive: MLCF must ensure strict compliance with pre-merger approval requirements for any future transactions . It is a reminder that in Pakistan’s current financial climate, where liquidity is king and speed is of the essence, even blue-chip conglomerates can find themselves navigating the grey areas between investment opportunity and regulatory process. The directive serves as a subtle but firm warning to the market that the CCP is watching the methods of stake-building as closely as the ultimate concentration of ownership .

Strategic Rationale: Beyond Horizontal Logic

To understand the “why,” one must look beyond the cement kilns of Daudkhel and toward the balance sheets of the group. The Kohinoor Maple Leaf Group, born from the trifurcation of the Saigol empire, has long been a bastion of textiles and cement . But 2026 presents a different economic calculus.

Conglomerate diversification is the name of the game. With the PSX experiencing the volatile convulsions of a pre-election year—oscillating between geopolitical panic and IMF-induced stability—banking stocks have emerged as a high-yield, defensive hedge . Unlike the cyclical nature of cement, which is hostage to construction schedules and government infrastructure spending, the banking sector offers exposure to interest rate spreads and consumer financing.

For MLCF, a stake in Faysal Bank is not about vertical integration; it is about earnings stability. Faysal Bank, with its significant presence in Islamic finance (a sector rapidly gaining traction in Pakistan), offers a counter-cyclical buffer to the group’s industrial holdings. As one analyst put it, “They are swapping kiln dust for deposit multiplier.”

The Real-Time Context: PSX Volatility and the Hunt for Yield (March 2026)

The timing of the final authorization is critical. March 2026 finds the Pakistani equity market in a state of calculated anxiety. The KSE-100 has recently weathered a 16.9% correction from its January peaks, triggered by Middle East tensions and fears over the Strait of Hormuz . While energy stocks swing wildly with every oil price fluctuation, banking giants like Faysal Bank offer a rare port in the storm.

According to Arif Habib Limited’s latest strategy notes, the banking sector is currently trading at a price-to-book discount, with institutions like National Bank of Pakistan offering dividend yields as high as 13.3% . While Faysal Bank’s yields are more modest than NBP’s, its shareholding structure—dominated by Bahrain’s Ithmaar Holding (66.78%)—makes it an attractive target for local industrial groups seeking influence without the burden of outright control .

By accumulating shares incrementally through the PSX, KMLG is effectively renting exposure to the financialization of the Pakistani economy. It is a low-profile, high-liquidity entry into a sector that the State Bank of Pakistan projects will remain resilient despite import pressures and currency fluctuations .

Faysal Bank Limited

Faysal Bank: The Prize Within

Why Faysal Bank specifically? The lender has carved a niche in the Islamic banking corridor, an area the government is keen to expand. With total institutional investors holding over 72% of the bank’s shares, it represents a tightly held, professionally managed asset .

Maple Leaf’s creeping acquisition suggests a desire to secure a seat at the table of Pakistan’s financial future. While the CCP authorization allows for an increased shareholding, it stops short of a full-blown merger. For now, this remains an “incursion”—a strategic toehold in the world of high finance, managed by the same family stewardship that Tariq Saigol has applied to transforming KMLG’s manufacturing base through sustainability and innovation .

The Verdict

The Maple Leaf Cement–Faysal Bank transaction is a harbinger of things to come in the 2026 Pakistani market. As the lines between industrial capital and financial capital blur, we will likely see more of these “conglomerate” acquisitions.

The CCP’s involvement, complete with its ex-post facto review and compliance directive, has set a precedent. It tells the market that while the commission is willing to facilitate investments that support “capital formation,” it will not tolerate a laissez-faire approach to merger control .

For the Saigol family, this is not just an investment; it is a hedge against the future. In an economy where cement demand can cool overnight but banking remains the lifeblood of commerce, owning a piece of the pipeline is the ultimate strategic pivot.

Continue Reading

Oil Crisis

The US$100 Barrel: Oil Shockwaves Hit South-east Asia — And Could Surge to $150

Published

on

oil crisis
Spread the love

Oil shock Southeast Asia | Strait of Hormuz disruption | Stagflation risk Philippines Thailand | Fuel subsidy bills Asia 2026

Picture a Monday morning in Bangkok’s Chatuchak district. Nattapong, a 34-year-old motorcycle-taxi driver who normally hauls commuters through gridlocked sois for roughly 400 baht a day, is staring at a petrol pump display that has climbed the equivalent of 18% in eight days. He hasn’t raised his fares yet — the app won’t let him — but his margins have almost evaporated. “Before, I could fill up and still send money home,” he says quietly. “Now I’m not sure.”

Multiply Nattapong’s dilemma across 700 million people, eleven countries, and a dozen interconnected supply chains, and you begin to understand what the Strait of Hormuz crisis of March 2026 is doing to South-east Asia. On the morning of Monday, March 9, 2026, Brent crude futures spiked as high as $119.50 a barrel — a session high that will be branded into the memory of every finance minister from Manila to Jakarta — before settling around $110.56, still up nearly 40% in a single month. WTI posted its largest weekly gain in the entire history of the futures contract, a staggering 35.6%, a record stretching back to 1983.

The trigger: joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran beginning February 28, which escalated into a full war and brought Strait of Hormuz shipping to a near-total halt. The choke point — that narrow 33-kilometre-wide passage between Oman and Iran — carries roughly 20 million barrels of oil per day, about one-fifth of global supply. When Iran’s Revolutionary Guard declared the waterway effectively closed and warned vessels they would be targeted, the arithmetic was brutal and immediate. Iraq and Kuwait began cutting output after running out of storage. Qatar’s energy minister told the Financial Times that crude could reach $150 per barrel if tankers remain unable to transit the strait in coming weeks. At Kpler, lead crude analyst Homayoun Falakshahi was blunter: “If between now and end of March you don’t have an amelioration of traffic around the strait, we could go to $150 a barrel,” he told CNN.

For South-east Asia — a region that imports the overwhelming majority of its oil and whose economies run on cheap fuel the way a clock runs on a mainspring — this is not merely a commodity story. It is a cost-of-living crisis, a monetary policy dilemma, and a fiscal time bomb, all detonating simultaneously.

Oil Shock Southeast Asia: Why the Region Is Uniquely Exposed

The geography alone is damning. Japan and the Philippines source roughly 90% of their crude from the Persian Gulf; China and India import 38% and 46% of their oil from the region, respectively. South-east Asia as a whole, with the sole exception of Malaysia, runs a persistent deficit in oil and gas trade. When the Strait of Hormuz tightens, the region doesn’t just pay more — it scrambles for supply.

MUFG Research calculates that every US$10 per barrel increase in oil prices worsens the current account position of Asian economies by 0.2–0.9% of GDP, with Thailand, Singapore, Taiwan, India, and the Philippines taking the largest hits. From a starting price of roughly $60 per barrel in January 2026 to a current print north of $110, that’s a $50-per-barrel shock — implying current account deterioration of potentially 1–4.5% of GDP for the region’s most vulnerable economies. Run that number through to your household electricity bill, your bag of jasmine rice, your morning commute, and the pain becomes visceral.

Nomura’s research team, in a note that has become one of the most-cited documents in Asian trading rooms this week, identified Thailand, India, South Korea, and the Philippines as the most vulnerable economies in Asia. The bank’s reasoning is unforgiving: Thailand carries the largest net oil import bill in Asia at 4.7% of GDP, meaning every 10% oil price change worsens its current account by 0.5 percentage points. The Philippines runs a current account deficit that, at oil above $90 per barrel on a sustained basis, is likely to breach 4.5% of GDP. “In Asia, Thailand, India, Korea, and the Philippines are the most vulnerable to higher oil prices, due to their high import dependence,” Nomura wrote, “while Malaysia would be a relative beneficiary as an energy exporter.”

Country by Country: Winners, Losers, and the Ones Caught in the Middle

The Philippines: Worst in Class, No Cushion

If there is one country in the region for which this crisis reads like a worst-case scenario, it is the Philippines. Manila has nearly 90% of its oil imports sourced from the Middle East and, crucially, operates a largely market-driven fuel pricing mechanism with minimal subsidies. There is no state buffer absorbing the shock before it hits the pump. Retailers in Manila imposed over ₱1-per-liter increases for the tenth consecutive week as of early March, covering diesel, kerosene, and gasoline. The Philippine peso slid back through the ₱58-per-dollar mark on March 9, adding a currency depreciation multiplier to an already brutal import bill.

ING Group estimates the Philippines could see inflation rise by up to 0.4 percentage points for every 10% increase in oil prices. At Nomura, the estimate is 0.5pp per 10% rise — the highest pass-through in the region. Oil at $110 represents roughly an 80% increase over January’s $60 baseline, an inflationary impulse that Capital Economics pegs could push headline CPI well above the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’s 2–4% target. Manila has already announced plans to build a diesel stockpile as an emergency buffer — an admission that supply anxiety, not just price, has entered the conversation.

Thailand: The Biggest Structural Loser

Thailand’s problem isn’t just the size of its oil import bill — it’s the timing. The country is already wrestling with below-potential growth, persistent deflationary pressures in some sectors, and a tourism sector still finding its post-COVID footing. MUFG Research flags Thailand as one of the economies most sensitive to oil price increases from an inflation perspective, with CPI rising up to 0.8 percentage points per US$10/bbl increase — the highest reading in their Asian sensitivity matrix.

The government responded swiftly, announcing a suspension of petroleum exports to protect domestic stocks, an extraordinary measure that signals just how seriously Bangkok is treating supply security. The Thai baht, already vulnerable, has come under selling pressure alongside the Philippine peso, Korean won, and Indian rupee. For Thai factory workers supplying export goods to Western markets, higher transport and energy costs arrive precisely when global demand is wobbling under the weight of US tariffs. It is, as the textbook definition goes, a stagflationary shock — cost pressures rising while growth falters.

Indonesia: The Fiscal Tightrope

Indonesia occupies a peculiar position. It is technically a net importer of petroleum products — paradoxical for a country that was once an OPEC member — but it deploys a system of fuel subsidies (via state-owned Pertamina) that partially shields consumers from global price moves. The catch, of course, is that the shield is funded by the national treasury.

Indonesia’s government budget was built around an Indonesian Crude Price (ICP) assumption of $70 per barrel for 2026. With Brent at $110, that assumption looks almost quaint. Government simulations, according to Indonesia’s fiscal authority, show the state budget deficit could widen to 3.6% of GDP if crude averages $92 per barrel over the year — already above the 3% legal ceiling. At $110 sustained, the numbers are worse. Officials have acknowledged that raising domestic fuel prices — essentially passing the shock to consumers — could become a last resort. Nomura estimates a 10% oil price rise could worsen Indonesia’s fiscal balance by 0.2 percentage points via higher subsidy spending, breaching the 3% deficit ceiling at sufficiently elevated prices. President Prabowo Subianto, who swept to power partly on a cost-of-living platform, faces a politically combustible choice between fiscal discipline and popular anger at the pump.

Malaysia: The Region’s Unlikely Winner

Not everyone in South-east Asia is suffering equally. Malaysia, a net oil and gas exporter and home to Petronas — one of Asia’s most profitable energy companies — finds itself on the rare right side of an oil shock. MUFG Research identifies Malaysia as the only net oil and gas exporter in the region, likely to see a small benefit to its trade balance from higher prices. The ringgit, which has been strengthening as a commodity-linked currency, provides a further buffer.

The complexity lies in Malaysia’s domestic subsidy architecture. Kuala Lumpur has been in the process of a painstaking, politically fraught RON95 fuel subsidy reform — targeting the top income tiers first — which was already reshaping the fiscal landscape before the current crisis. Higher global prices actually make the reform argument easier: the subsidy bill would explode if oil stays elevated, giving Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim political cover to accelerate rationalization. For Malaysia’s treasury, $110 oil is a revenue windfall and a subsidy headache simultaneously.

Singapore: The Price-Setter That Cannot Escape

Singapore imports everything, including every drop of fuel, but its role as a regional refining and trading hub makes it a price-setter rather than merely a price-taker. The city-state’s commuters are already feeling it: transport costs have risen sharply, and the government’s careful cost-of-living management is under renewed pressure. MUFG’s analysis ranks Singapore among the economies with the highest current account sensitivity to oil price increases, even though its GDP per capita provides a far larger fiscal cushion than its regional neighbours.

Stagflation Risk: The Word Nobody Wanted to Hear

The word “stagflation” is being whispered — and in some trading rooms, shouted — across Asia this week. Nomura’s note explicitly warns of a “stagflationary shock”: the simultaneous combination of rising inflation (from fuel and food cost pass-through) and slowing growth (from weakening consumer purchasing power and export competitiveness). It is the worst of both monetary worlds, leaving central banks without a clean tool. Cut rates to support growth, and you risk stoking inflation. Hold rates to fight inflation, and you choke a slowing economy.

ING Group notes the impact is far from uniform, with several economies partially shielded by subsidies or regulated pricing — but for the Philippines, the stronger inflation hit from market-driven fuel prices creates direct pressure on the BSP to hold rates. Capital Economics, while not abandoning its rate-cut forecasts for the Philippines and Thailand, has flagged that central banks may pause if oil hits and holds above $100 — as it already has. The ripple effects move quickly: higher fuel costs push up food prices (fertilisers, transport, cold chains), which push up core inflation, which pushes up wage demands, which erode manufacturer competitiveness. The chain is well-known. The speed this time is not.

Travel and Tourism: The Invisible Casualty

The oil shock has an airborne dimension that tends to get buried beneath the more immediate news of pump prices and fiscal deficits. Jet fuel — which tracks closely with crude — has surged in lockstep with Brent. Airlines operating regional routes out of Singapore’s Changi, Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi, and Manila’s NAIA are facing fuel costs that represent 25–35% of operating expenses at normal prices. At current Brent levels, that share rises materially. The consequences are already filtering through: several Gulf carriers have partially resumed flights from Dubai International Airport after earlier disruptions, but route uncertainty and insurance premiums for Gulf overflight remain elevated.

For South-east Asia’s tourism recovery — Bali, Chiang Mai, Phuket, and Palawan were all expecting strong 2026 visitor numbers after several lean post-pandemic years — the arithmetic is uncomfortable. Higher jet fuel costs translate, with a lag of weeks rather than months, into higher airfares. Budget carriers such as AirAsia and Cebu Pacific, which built their business models around cheap fuel enabling cheap tickets, have the least pricing power and the thinnest margins. The traveller contemplating a Bangkok city break or a Bali retreat in Q2 2026 may find the price tag has quietly risen 10–20% since they first searched. That is not a crisis. But it is a headwind — and a reminder that in a globalised economy, no leisure industry is fully insulated from a Persian Gulf conflict.

Could Oil Really Hit $150? The Scenarios

The $150 question is no longer a fringe analyst talking point. Qatar’s energy minister said it publicly. Kpler’s lead crude analyst said it on record. Goldman Sachs wrote to clients that prices are likely to exceed $100 next week if no resolution emerges — a forecast already overtaken by events.

Three scenarios shape the trajectory:

Scenario 1 — Rapid de-escalation (30 days). The US brokers a ceasefire, Hormuz reopens to traffic with naval escorts, and oil retraces toward $80–85. This is the “fast war, fast recovery” template. The damage to South-east Asia is real but contained — a quarter or two of elevated inflation, some current account deterioration, minor growth drag.

Scenario 2 — Prolonged blockade (60–90 days). Tanker insurance remains unavailable or prohibitively expensive, shipping companies stay out, and the physical supply disruption persists. JPMorgan’s Natasha Kaneva has modelled production cuts approaching 6 million barrels per day under this scenario. Brent in the $120–130 range becomes the base case. For South-east Asia, this means inflation breaching targets in the Philippines and Thailand, subsidy bills in Indonesia threatening fiscal rules, and a genuine monetary policy bind across the region.

Scenario 3 — Escalation with infrastructure damage. Further strikes on Gulf energy facilities — as already seen against Iranian oil infrastructure and Qatari and Saudi installations — reduce physical capacity for months, not weeks. $150 becomes plausible. The 1970s-style shock, feared but never fully materialised in the 2022 Ukraine episode, arrives in earnest. South-east Asian growth forecasts get ripped up. The IMF’s 2026 regional outlook, cautiously optimistic as recently as January, would require emergency revision.

The G7 finance ministers were meeting Monday to discuss coordinated strategic reserve releases; the Trump administration announced a $20 billion tanker insurance programme, though shipping companies remain hesitant to transit the region. These measures can dampen prices at the margin. They cannot substitute for an open strait.

Policy Responses and the Green Energy Accelerant

Governments across the region are not waiting passively. Thailand’s petroleum export suspension, Manila’s emergency diesel stockpiling, Indonesia’s scenario planning for domestic fuel price adjustments — these are the short-term reflexes of policymakers who have been through oil shocks before and know that the first 72 hours matter.

The more interesting question is whether this crisis, like previous energy shocks, accelerates structural energy transition. Malaysia’s Petronas has been expanding LNG capacity and renewable partnerships. Indonesia’s vast geothermal resources — the world’s second-largest — have long been under-utilised relative to their potential. The Philippines, which currently imports nearly all its energy, has been pushing solar and wind development under the Clean Energy Act framework. The calculus that kept governments cautious about rapid transition — cheap imported fossil fuels were easy and politically manageable — has just shifted violently.

As ING’s analysis notes, energy makes up a large share of consumer inflation baskets across emerging Asia, meaning the political pain of oil shocks is both immediate and democratically legible. Leaders who endure it once tend to invest in insulation against the next one. The 1973 oil shock gave Japan its world-class energy efficiency. The 2022 Ukraine crisis gave Europe its renewable acceleration. Whether 2026’s Hormuz crisis becomes South-east Asia’s inflection point toward genuine energy security remains the region’s most consequential open question.

The Bottom Line

Brent at $110 and rising is not a number — it is a sentence, handed down to 700 million people who had little say in the conflict that produced it. For the Philippines, it means inflation at the upper edge of tolerance and monetary policy frozen in place when the economy needs easing. For Thailand, it is a stagflationary pressure on a growth story that was already fragile. For Indonesia, it is a fiscal arithmetic problem that risks breaching the legal deficit ceiling. For Malaysia, it is a windfall tempered by subsidy obligations and political exposure. For Singapore, it is a cost-management challenge that tests the city-state’s well-earned reputation for economic resilience.

The $150 scenario is not inevitable. But it is no longer implausible. And in a region that runs on imported energy, the difference between $110 and $150 is not merely financial. It is the cost of a week’s groceries for a Manila family. It is whether a Thai factory orders its next shift. It is whether Nattapong, Bangkok’s motorcycle-taxi driver, can still afford to fill his tank and send money home.

That is the oil shock South-east Asia is living through, right now, in real time.

Continue Reading

Asia

When the Strait Shakes: How the US-Iran War Is Rewriting the Rules of Global Finance

Published

on

harmuz map e1772468752485
Spread the love

There is a moment in every genuine geopolitical crisis when financial markets stop pretending they are merely reacting to data and begin reckoning with something more elemental: fear. That moment arrived on the morning of Saturday, February 28, 2026, when the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran—killing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and igniting the most consequential military conflict in the Middle East in a generation. By Monday morning in New York, the world’s trading floors were measuring the aftershocks in barrels, basis points, and bullion.

What began as a targeted military operation has rapidly evolved into a multi-front conflict with cascading implications for energy markets, global supply chains, and the architecture of international finance. For investors, policymakers, and ordinary citizens watching the price of petrol rise at the pump, the central question is no longer whether markets will feel the US-Iran conflict market impact—they already are. The real question is how deep, how prolonged, and who ultimately bears the cost.

Immediate Market Reactions: Risk-Off in Real Time

The financial system’s first verdict was swift and largely predictable in its direction if not its magnitude. Stocks fell and the dollar climbed as military strikes intensified across the Middle East, sending oil to its biggest surge in four years while stoking concern that inflation will accelerate. Gold briefly topped $5,400. The S&P 500 dropped 1.1%, following losses in Europe and Asia. Airlines and cruise operators sank while energy and defense shares jumped. Bloomberg

By Monday’s open, the damage had spread more broadly. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 282 points, or 0.6%. The S&P 500 lost 0.5%, and the Nasdaq Composite declined 0.4%—though the three major averages rallied off session lows as gains in technology stocks helped trim losses. At their nadir, the Dow was down about 600 points, or 1.2%. CNBC The CBOE Volatility Index—Wall Street’s so-called “fear gauge”—jumped to its highest level of 2026.

The bond market offered a counterintuitive signal. The 10-year Treasury yield was little changed Monday at 3.97%, regaining some ground after falling to an 11-month low of 3.926% on Friday. CNBC That modest move suggested bond traders are torn between two forces: a flight-to-safety impulse pulling yields lower, and an inflation anxiety—driven by soaring oil—pushing them back up. As an analyst, I’ve observed this precise tension before in conflict-driven crises: the bond market’s internal debate often telegraphs how long-lasting the disruption will prove to be.

The Strait of Hormuz: The World’s Most Expensive Bottleneck

No single geographic feature looms larger over the geopolitical risks oil prices calculation than the Strait of Hormuz. This narrow waterway between Iran and Oman is, in the words of one analyst, not a “production story” but a “chokepoint story”—and chokepoints, when threatened, carry systemic implications that dwarf any single country’s output.

More than 14 million barrels per day flowed through the Strait in 2025, or roughly a third of the world’s total seaborne crude exports. About three-quarters of those barrels went to China, India, Japan and South Korea. China, the world’s second-largest economy, receives half of its crude imports through the Strait. CNBC Iran has threatened to close this waterway entirely.

About 13 million barrels per day of crude oil transited the Strait of Hormuz in 2025, accounting for roughly 31% of global seaborne crude flows, according to market intelligence firm Kpler. CNBC Container shipping giants have already responded: Maersk announced it would suspend all vessel crossings in the Strait of Hormuz until further notice, warning that services calling ports in the Arabian Gulf may experience delays. CNBC

Amrita Sen, founder of Energy Aspects, told CNBC that oil markets are likely to hold around $80 a barrel for now after an initial spike, noting stabilization, but warned that “what the U.S. will not be able to do is control these one-off attacks on tankers.” CNBC The insurance industry is already pricing in the risk: marine hull insurance in the Gulf could rise by 25 to 50 percent in the near term, according to Dylan Mortimer, marine hull UK war leader at insurance broker Marsh. CNBC Those premiums ultimately flow through to the cost of every barrel, and every barrel’s cost flows through to every economy on earth.

Sector-Specific Impacts: Winners, Losers, and the Middle Ground

The Iran tensions global economy shock has not distributed its pain—or its windfalls—evenly across sectors. The divergence is stark.

Energy and Defense: The Reluctant Beneficiaries

Several oil stocks surged following the strikes on fears the conflict could disrupt global crude production and transport. Exxon Mobil and Chevron shares gained about 4%, while ConocoPhillips was also up more than 5%. Brent crude prices hit a new 52-week high of more than $78 on Monday. CNBC Defense contractors followed suit: Lockheed Martin shares gained 6%, while Northrop Grumman was up 5%, and drone maker AeroVironment jumped more than 10%. CNBC

Travel and Hospitality: The Immediate Casualties

Travel-related stocks dropped sharply. United Airlines, most exposed to international travel of the US carriers, tumbled more than 6%. American and Delta each fell more than 5%. Marriott International slid nearly 5%, while Airbnb sank more than 3%. Online reservation platforms Expedia and Booking Holdings slid more than 4% and 3% respectively. CNBC

The human toll on aviation has been immediate. Airlines canceled thousands of flights for the week in the Middle East, with 1,560 flights scrubbed on Monday alone, or 41.28% of those scheduled for arrival in Middle East countries, according to aviation data firm Cirium. Hundreds of thousands of passengers remain stranded. CNBC

Safe-Haven Assets: Gold’s Gravity-Defying Run

Gold’s ascent has been the defining market narrative of this crisis. Gold rallied above $5,300 per ounce, hitting record highs as investors moved into safe-haven assets. JP Morgan has raised its gold price target to $6,300 per ounce by December 2026, reflecting analyst confidence that this isn’t just a temporary spike. INDmoney Precious metals and the US dollar are now functioning as the twin shock absorbers of the global financial system.

Long-Term Risks: Inflation, Fragmentation, and the Asian Dimension

Beyond the immediate volatility lies a more structurally dangerous set of pressures. Elevated oil prices, if sustained, function as a regressive global tax—hitting emerging markets, commodity-importing nations, and lower-income households hardest.

Standard Chartered’s Global Head of Research Eric Robertsen noted that investors had already been underpricing geopolitical risk, with commodity-linked currencies outperforming, suggesting markets are paying for exposure to scarce resources and terms-of-trade winners. CNBC

The implications for Asia—the region most dependent on Hormuz-transiting oil—are severe and underappreciated by Western financial commentary. China, Japan, South Korea, and India collectively import the vast majority of their crude through this corridor. Any sustained disruption would accelerate inflationary pressures across Asian manufacturing economies, potentially stalling the global export recovery that policymakers have counted on.

There is also the geopolitical fracture dimension. China and Russia have condemned the US-Israeli strikes. In a phone call with his Russian counterpart, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said it was “unacceptable for the US and Israel to launch attacks against Iran.” CNBC This fracture carries long-term implications for dollar-denominated trade systems, multilateral institutions, and the cohesion of any post-conflict reconstruction framework.

The scenario analysis from Wells Fargo is instructive. Their strategists mapped out scenarios ranging from quick de-escalation to a worst-case prolonged Hormuz closure: in their worst-case scenario, the S&P 500 could drop to 6,000 from current levels around 6,850, but their base case still targets 7,500 by year-end. INDmoney The range of that spread—nearly 25%—is itself a measure of how genuinely uncertain the endgame remains.

The Diplomatic Paradox: War Launched During Talks

Perhaps the most jarring dimension of this crisis is the diplomatic context in which it erupted. The UN Secretary-General noted that the joint military operation by Israel and the United States occurred following indirect talks between the US and Iran mediated by Oman, “squandering an opportunity for diplomacy.” UN News

Although the last round of talks ended Thursday with Iran agreeing to “never” stockpile enriched uranium, that was not enough to avert US military action. CNN Markets loathe uncertainty, but they despise diplomatic incoherence even more—because it removes the scaffolding of predictable resolution. The absence of a clear off-ramp is precisely what is keeping risk premiums elevated across asset classes.

President Trump has suggested the conflict could last four weeks, and separately told The Atlantic that Iran’s new leadership wants to resume negotiations. Trump said Iran’s new leadership wanted to resume negotiations and that he has agreed to talk to them, saying “They want to talk, and I have agreed to talk.” CNBC Markets will be parsing every diplomatic signal for evidence of de-escalation—any credible ceasefire announcement would likely trigger a sharp oil selloff and equity recovery.

Investor Implications and Strategic Considerations

For portfolio managers navigating Middle East conflict investment strategies, several principles apply in this environment.

Overweight energy and defense selectively. The oil price tailwind for integrated majors and defense contractors is real, but entry points matter. Much of the initial upside is already priced in.

Reduce exposure to aviation, hospitality, and emerging-market importers. Nations like India, South Korea, and Japan face disproportionate energy import cost pressures, which will compress corporate margins and strain current accounts.

Monitor the Strait obsessively. David Roche of Quantum Strategy framed the market impact in terms of duration and whether Iran would attempt to close the Strait of Hormuz—if the conflict is short and contained, the risk-off move and oil spike could be brief; if it turns into a three-to-five-week regime change endeavor, markets would react “rather badly.” CNBC

Gold remains the structural hedge. With JP Morgan targeting $6,300 by year-end and central bank demand for bullion already at historical highs entering 2026, gold’s role as the geopolitical insurance policy of last resort appears set to deepen.

Conclusion: A Conflict That Will Rewrite Risk Premiums

The US-Iran conflict of February-March 2026 is not merely another geopolitical flare-up to be absorbed and forgotten within a trading week. The assassination of Khamenei, the direct involvement of US military forces, the threatened closure of the world’s most critical energy chokepoint, and the fissure it has opened between Western and non-Western powers collectively represent a structural inflection point for global markets.

In the short term, monitor Brent crude and the CBOE VIX daily as the conflict’s most sensitive barometers. In the medium term, watch whether Iran’s successor leadership follows through on negotiation signals or opts for prolonged asymmetric warfare against Gulf infrastructure. In the long term, consider how this crisis accelerates the already-underway energy transition: every $10 increase in sustainable oil prices makes renewable alternatives marginally more competitive, nudging capital allocation toward green infrastructure.

Conflict is never an opportunity to celebrate. But history teaches that periods of maximum geopolitical uncertainty are also when the contours of the next financial order begin to take shape—quietly, beneath the noise of war. The investors and institutions who read those contours correctly today will be better positioned for the world that emerges when the smoke clears over Tehran.

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2026 THE FINANCE ,INC . All Rights Reserved .