Tuesday, 28 April 2026

IS RUSSIA IN ITS HEART STILL EUROPEAN

28 April 2026

1. IS RUSSIA IN ITS HEART STILL EUROPEAN?

SUMMARY

Russia’s roots are unmistakably European. From the river traders of the Kievan Rus linking the Baltic to Byzantium, to the conversion to Orthodox Christianity in 988 under Vladimir the Great, the foundations were laid firmly within the European world.

Even the Mongol period did not break that trajectory. Moscow rose in power under the Golden Horde, but the civilisational orientation remained westward. That choice became explicit under Peter the Great, who built Saint Petersburg facing the Baltic and embedded Russia into European culture and diplomacy.

For centuries, Russia was not outside Europe but one of its major poles - sometimes rival, often uneasy, but undeniably part of the same system.

The real question today is not whether Russia is European, but whether Europe and Russia still recognise each other as belonging to the same civilisation.

Twelve moments in The Story of a European Civilisation


2. Origins – Kievan Rus And The European Frame

Until 2022 - and certainly before 2014 - Russia had largely seen itself as part of Europe. That instinct runs deep in its history. It goes back to the origins of the Kievan Rus, founded by Scandinavian traders and warriors, often linked to Sweden, who sailed down the great river systems and established Kyiv as a trading post between the North and the Byzantine and Islamic worlds.

“Rus” is usually associated with these groups, sometimes linked to rowing crews ("rus" means "oar"), though the exact meaning is debated. What matters is the direction of travel. From the beginning, this was a civilisation plugged into European and Mediterranean trade networks, not an isolated eastern outpost.


3. Christianity - A Strategic And Civilisational Choice

The Rus converted to Christianity in 988 under Vladimir the Great, drawing from the Byzantine Empire and therefore the Eastern Orthodox Church. This was not just a spiritual step but a strategic one. It brought legitimacy to a Moscow elite ruling over ethnically diverse lands, it strengthened trade links, and it aligned the state with a powerful and sophisticated civilisation.

As with the Roman Empire before it, adopting Christianity helped unify different ethnicities and cultures into a common defining Order - that sacralised political authority, that imposed a shared moral and legal code, that embedded the state within a wider Orthodox civilisation, that gave Russia a sense of providential mission. It also placed Rus firmly within the wider European world, albeit on its eastern, Orthodox side rather than the Latin Catholic one.


Providential mission - belief that a state or people has a purpose guided by divine will

Messianic role - sense of being chosen to fulfil a larger historical or spiritual destiny


4. The Mongol Period – A Shift In Power, Not Identity

I’m not entirely sure how deep the Mongol influence ran, but under the Golden Horde, descendants of Genghis Khan, the princes of Moscow were granted authority to collect taxes on behalf of the Mongol rulers. They used this position to build wealth and authority, and little by little Moscow emerged as the dominant centre of the Russian lands.

Some historians argue that this period shaped Russia’s later centralised and autocratic tendencies. Others see continuity with earlier European patterns. The evidence allows both readings. What we could say is that though the Mongols were military strong, they were culturally weak and this left a vacuum with the Russians looking for an identity.


5. Medieval Europe – Integration With A Difference

In medieval times, Rus elites intermarried with European royal families and participated in a shared aristocratic culture. They were clearly part of Europe, even if not of Latin Christendom. Politically and religiously they belonged to the Greek and Eastern Orthodox world, which gave them a slightly different trajectory.

There is a long-standing argument that this eastern outlook explains later authoritarian tendencies. Another view, associated with Emmanuel Todd, is that political culture grows more from family structures and social organisation bottom up, rather than from religion or elite preferences alone. On that reading, Russia is not unique, and comparisons with countries like Germany are not out of place.


6. Westernisation – A Conscious Turn Towards Europe

Then came a decisive moment with Peter the Great. By building Saint Petersburg facing the Baltic, he made what can only be described as a civilisational choice. Russia would look west.

From that point on, the direction is unmistakable. Western technology was imported, elites adopted Western dress and customs, and by the 19th century Russian high society spoke French, the language franca of diplomacy, and moved fully within European cultural and political life.

Western Europe was the benchmark. Even those who argued that Russia was something separate, something Slavic, were arguing against that benchmark, which rather proves the point.


7. Rivalry Does Not Mean Exclusion

There followed a long period in which Russia was considered by the United Kingdom to be its principal rival. Yet rivalry is not exclusion. On the contrary, it confirms Russia’s place within the European system of great powers.

Even after the Soviet Revolution, Russia did not somehow leave Europe intellectually. It remained part of a European tradition of political thought and industrial modernity. After all, Karl Marx was himself a European thinker, and his ideas - that history is driven by class struggle, that capitalism contains the seeds of its own collapse, that the state is an instrument of class power - shaped Russia profoundly.


8. The Modern Break – Competing Readings

The more recent period is where interpretations begin to diverge sharply. The post-Cold War "unipolar moment" (a phrase coined by Charles Krauthammer in 1990), particularly under Bill Clinton, marks the moment when the West turned away from Russia, with key steps in the Bucharest Summit of 2008 when Ukraine and Georgia were told by America that they will at some point become members of NATO, and especially 2014 when Kiev began shelling the Donbas and as a result Russia took back Crimea. (The Donbas was created by Catherine, wife of Peter the Great, at the end of the 18th century and was populated with Russian people who have retained their identity to this day.)

So after a stormy 1990s, with the arrival of Putin, Russia made a number of overtures towards integration with the West, including discussions around NATO and closer ties with the EU, although there is disagreement over how feasible these could be and whether the subsequent breakdown was driven more by Western expansion or by Russia’s own "strategic choices".


Russia’s strategic choices” - actions in Russia's near abroad and its response to NATO expansion, but not any evidenced plan to invade Western Europe or recreate the Soviet Union.


9. Power, Strategy And The Question Of Exclusion

A longer pattern can be observed in which Britain first, and later the United States, sought to push Russia out of Europe. Thinkers such as Halford Mackinder certainly framed Eurasia as the key to global power, with his "pivot of History" being a buffer zone from Baltic to Black Sea separating sea and land powers - that way of thinking influenced strategic policy.

Whether this amounts to a deliberate exclusion of Russia, or whether Russia’s own behaviour produced that outcome, remains a matter of interpretation.

Mackinder, "The Geographical Pivot of History" published 1904 and 1920

Who rules East Europe commands the Heartland;

who rules the Heartland commands the World-Island;

who rules the World-Island commands the world.


10. Putin And The European Idea

It is also worth recalling that Vladimir Putin, particularly early in his presidency, did signal an interest in closer integration with Europe, including discussions around NATO and economic alignment with the EU.

Some see missed opportunities here. Others see fundamental human rights and legal incompatibilities that would have surfaced sooner or later. Again, both readings are present in the literature.

It is argued that Clinton and subsequent American presidents marched NATO east up to within a few hundred kilometers of Moscow, weaponising this former buffer space including introducing nuclear weapons, and encouraged and finance colour revolutions, thereby creating anxiety and generating security concerns that obliged Moscow to eventually call a halt at Georgia in 2008 and Ukraine in 2014.


11. A Civilisation In Question

So historically, Russia has not been an outsider to Europe. It has been one of its major poles, sometimes aligned, sometimes in rivalry, but always part of the same broad civilisational space.

The real question now is not whether Russia is European. It is whether Western Europe and Russia still recognise each other as belonging to the same civilisation at all. And beyond that, where the boundary between West and East now lies, and whether the current settlement is stable or simply a pause before the next shift.

Flows of energy, trade, religion and ideas across Eurasia


12. Reorientation East

Against that backdrop, Russia has, perhaps contrary to its long European orientation, been pushed into a gradual rebalancing towards the East. Strategic alignment with China has deepened across energy, finance, and security, while alternative frameworks such as BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation have taken on greater importance. At the same time, Russia’s role in West Asia has expanded, from its intervention in Syria to its growing ties with Iran and engagement with Gulf states. The result is a geopolitical posture that looks increasingly Eurasian rather than European — less a natural destination than a strategic adjustment to shifting pressures and constraints.


Glossary

  • Kievan Rus - early medieval state linking Northern Europe with Byzantium and the Islamic world.
  • Orthodox Christianity - Eastern branch of Christianity rooted in Byzantium.
  • Golden Horde - Mongol polity that dominated Russian lands in the medieval period.
  • Westernisation - deliberate adoption of Western European culture, technology, and institutions.

References

  • Franklin & Shepard – The Emergence of Rus 750–1200
  • Orlando Figes – Natasha’s Dance
  • Geoffrey Hosking – Russia and the Russians
  • Dominic Lieven – Empire: The Russian Empire and Its Rivals
  • Britannica – entries on Kievan Rus, Vladimir I, Peter the Great

Sunday, 26 April 2026

FX SWAP LINES USED TO SUPPORT THE US FISCAL BUDGET

26 April 2026

1. FED INDEPENDENCE – FORM, FUNCTION AND REINTERPRETATION

What could be worse than rising interest rates on a government that already has 125% debt to GDP?

Central bank independence has long been treated as a cornerstone of modern economic policy. The Federal Reserve sets interest rates, controls liquidity, and operates at arm’s length from the political cycle. That is the theory. The reality has always been more nuanced.

Under Trump, the issue is not whether independence exists, but how it is defined. Interest rate policy remains formally within the domain of the Federal Reserve. No administration can openly instruct the Fed to cut or raise rates without risking a collapse in credibility. Yet independence has never meant isolation. It has meant a division of responsibilities, one that can be stretched without being formally broken.

The current moment is characterised by precisely that stretching. The focus is shifting away from interest rates alone and towards the broader toolkit of central banking, particularly in the domain of international finance. It is here, in the less visible mechanisms of liquidity provision, that the boundary between monetary policy and political strategy becomes most fluid.

Central bank independence - ability of a monetary authority to operate without direct political instruction
Monetary policy - management of interest rates and money supply
Credibility - market confidence in the consistency and integrity of policy.
Fx swap lines - a new strategic importance


2. WARSH, BESSENT AND THE POLITICS OF ALIGNMENT

The re-emergence of Kevin Warsh must be understood in this context. Warsh has historically been associated with a more hawkish stance, favouring tighter policy to control inflation. His positioning today, in a period defined by fiscal strain and geopolitical conflict, signals a shift in emphasis rather than a change in doctrine.

Alongside him stands Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, operating brief for fiscal needs and financial strategy. The relationship between Warsh, Bessent, and the presidency reflects a form of coordination that does not need to be explicit to be effective ( we have talked many times in the past how no conspiracy theory is needed to explain cooperation between different groups in an elite). Interest rates may remain formally independent the domain of an independent Fed, but the broader conduct of policy, particularly in areas such as international liquidity, is increasingly aligned with the needs of the state. Then there is the immediate need to pay interest on a ballooning public debt.

This is not the abandonment of in-principle independence, but it is a reinterpretation. The Federal Reserve keeps control over its core instruments, but its actions are bounded within a wider strategic framework defined by fiscal pressure and geopolitical necessity.

Hawkish - favouring tighter monetary policy to control inflation
Policy coordination - alignment between monetary and fiscal authorities
Strategic framework - broader set of objectives guiding policy choices

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3. SWAP LINES – FROM EMERGENCY TOOL TO SYSTEMIC LEVER

At the centre of this evolution at the moment lies the swap line. Formally, a swap line is a temporary exchange of currencies between central banks, to provide short term dollar liquidity. The Federal Reserve provides dollars to a foreign central bank, which in turn provides its own currency as collateral, with the agreement that the transaction will be reversed at a later date.

In technical terms, this is a short-term liquidity operation. But in systemic terms, it can be something much more significant.

The global financial system is built around the dollar. In periods of stress, demand for dollars rises sharply, particularly outside the United States. Without access to liquidity, institutions are forced to sell assets to obtain dollars. The most liquid assets available are US Treasuries. Thus, the very instrument that finances the US government becomes vulnerable at precisely the moment when stability is most needed.

Swap lines intervene at that point. By providing dollar liquidity, they prevent forced selling. They do not directly finance the federal budget, but by putting a brake on foreign central banks selling U.S treasuries, they protect the market in which that budget is financed - without this break bulk selling of treasuries would raise the yield and increase the interest that the US government has to pay.

4. BESSENT'S USE OF THE SWAP LINE IN THIS CASE

Bessent previously used his Treasury's Exchange Stabilisation Fund to bail out Argentinian govt bonds, but the ESF is for small-scale operations, and there is no new money creation - the Treasury cannot create money, only the banks can do this. 

For the UAE and probably other GCC States the amount required means a Fed Operation. The Fed would create the dollars and then loan them to the foreign central bank and receive foreign currency in return, expanding the Fed's balance sheet. The idea is that at a point in the future, the Swap transaction would be reversed at the same initial exchange rate that applied In the initial transfer, and I presume the Dollars are cancelled.

The thing to note about these Fed-operated swap lines is that the amount of money creation is in effect unlimited and furthermore does not appear In accounting terms as money creation, but of course if it is not reversed then that is what it is, albeit hidden.

We have to keep in mind that these transactions would normally be a matter of public record and so transparent to any inquirer.

Swap line - temporary exchange of currencies between central banks
Liquidity - availability of cash or funding in the system
Forced selling - liquidation driven by necessity rather than choice
Exchange Stabilisation Fund - Treasury pool used for currency interventions
Fiscal resources - government funds from taxes or borrowing

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5. HORMUZ, THE GULF AND THE PRESSURE ON THE SYSTEM

The importance of this mechanism becomes clear in the context of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. This narrow passage carries a substantial share of the world’s energy supply and other vital resources. Its disruption is not purely a regional issue - it is a worldwide economic shock that risks precipitating a global recession or worse.

For Gulf states such as the United Arab Emirates, Qarar and Saudi Arabia, the consequences are immediate. Export revenues decline, fiscal balances deteriorate, and pressure builds on their dollar-pegged currencies. Defending those pegs requires access to dollars, either through reserves or external support.

At the same time, these states are deeply integrated into the US financial system. Their reserves and sovereign wealth are heavily invested in dollar assets, including US Treasuries. Under stress, they face a choice: liquidate those assets to obtain dollars, or seek alternative sources of liquidity.

Here is where swap lines become strategically significant.

Currency peg - fixed exchange rate linking a currency to the dollar
Reserves - foreign currency assets held by central banks
Supply shock - disruption to the availability of key resources

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6. TRANSPARENCY AND THE GEOGRAPHY OF POLICY

In Europe and Japan, the use of swap lines is transparent. Balance sheets expand, disclosures are made, and public scrutiny follows. The institutional framework imposes limits not only on what can be done, but on how it can be perceived.

The Gulf operates under a different political economy. Disclosure standards are narrower, and the management of reserves, sovereign wealth, and state strategy is more centralised. This does not render actions invisible, but it allows for a greater degree of discretion in timing and presentation.

This distinction matters. It means that the same instrument, a swap line, can function differently depending on the context. In transparent systems, it is a visible stabilisation tool. In more opaque systems, it can also serve as a mechanism of alignment, shaping behaviour without the same level of public accounting.

Transparency - openness and public disclosure of financial operations
Opacity - limited visibility of actions and intentions
Political economy - interaction between politics and economic policy


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7. INDIRECT SUPPORT FOR THE FEDERAL BUDGET

The link to the federal budget is indirect but powerful.

The United States must refinance large volumes of debt - $9.2 trillion this fiscal year, approx a quarter of the US governments public debt. The sustainability of this process depends on domestic and foreign conditions, especially on the behaviour of foreign holders. If key holders, such as these Gulf states, were forced to sell Treasuries in order to obtain liquidity, prices would fall, yields would rise, and financing conditions would deteriorate.

Swap lines alter this dynamic. By providing dollar liquidity, they reduce the need for asset sales. They support currency pegs, stabilise financial systems, and maintain alignment with the dollar network. The result is a more stable Treasury market.

This is not direct financing. No funds flow from the Federal Reserve to the Treasury through this mechanism. Instead, the system is stabilised in a way that allows the Treasury to continue borrowing under manageable conditions.

In this sense, swap lines function as part of a broader architecture that sustains fiscal capacity without explicitly funding it.

Yields - returns demanded by investors to hold bonds. Prices and yields are inversely related.
Financing conditions - environment in which borrowing takes place
Fiscal capacity - ability of a government to fund its spending

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8. CONCLUSION – INDEPENDENCE IN A SYSTEM UNDER STRESS

The current moment reveals the limits of simple categories. Central bank independence remains intact in form, but it is evolving in function. The Federal Reserve continues to control interest rates, but its role within the global system is increasingly shaped by geopolitical and fiscal realities.

Swap lines illustrate this evolution. They are presented as temporary, technical tools, yet they operate as structural supports within a system that must absorb both economic shocks and political strain. Their effect on the federal budget is indirect, but it is real. By stabilising the environment in which borrowing occurs, they help sustain the fiscal system without formally becoming part of it.

What emerges is not a breach of independence, but a transformation. Independence is no longer defined solely by distance from politics. It is defined by the ability to operate within a system where monetary policy, fiscal necessity, and geopolitical strategy are increasingly intertwined.

Structural support - underlying mechanism that sustains a system over time
Geopolitical strategy - use of economic and political tools to achieve international objectives
Interdependence - mutual reliance between different parts of a system

Friday, 24 April 2026

THE CHIANG MAI MONEY WALK: HOW A CITY WORKED WITHOUT MODERN MONEY

24 April 2026

Thank you chatGPT, we won't put you on scout duty don't worry

1. 01 May 2026 – THE CHIANG MAI MONEY WALK: HOW A CITY WORKED WITHOUT MODERN MONEY

A simple idea, but a different lens.

We walk the Old City early, before the heat builds, and we look at it not as a collection of temples and museums but as a functioning financial system. Where wealth was stored, how it was extracted, how it moved, and how ordinary people lived within it.

This is not a tour of coins. It is a tour of how money actually worked.


OVERVIEW

A short early morning walk through Chiang Mai that reveals how a pre modern economy really functioned. Temples as banks, kings as tax authorities, trade routes as lifelines. Start early. Finish before the heat. See the system, not just the sights.


2. PRACTICAL PLAN – THURSDAY 07 MAY 2026

We meet at 07:30 and finish around 11:30, covering no more than two to two and a half kilometres on flat, mostly shaded streets. The pace is deliberately slow. This is a reflective walk rather than an exercise in ticking off sights.

The route follows a logical sequence. We begin with wealth, move to power, pause to cool down, then step into structured explanation, and finally, if energy allows, end with everyday life. The stops are Wat Phra Singh, then Wat Chedi Luang, followed by a coffee break in the Ratchadamnoen area, then the Chiang Mai City Arts & Cultural Centre, and optionally the Lanna Folklife Museum just across the road.


3. STOP ONE – WAT PHRA SINGH: TEMPLES AS BANKS

We begin early, when the air is still cool and the courtyards are quiet. At Wat Phra Singh the first thing to understand is that this is not only a religious site. It is also a financial institution in a pre modern sense.


Wealth accumulated here in the form of gold, land, and offerings. Donations acted as a steady inflow of capital, and monasteries redistributed food and resources, particularly in times of stress. In effect, temples functioned as informal banks combined with welfare systems. They absorbed surplus from society and reallocated it in ways that stabilised the community.


The first insight is simple but important. Money is not just coins. It is stored trust embedded in institutions.


Glossary

  • Lanna - Historic northern Thai kingdom centred on Chiang Mai
  • Capital accumulation - Build up of wealth or assets over time
  • Redistribution - Reallocation of resources through institutions
  • Informal banking - Financial roles performed outside formal banks

4. STOP TWO – WAT CHEDI LUANG: POWER AND TAX

A short shaded walk brings us to Wat Chedi Luang, where the scale immediately changes. What we see here is not local accumulation but the visible imprint of state power.


Structures of this size require organised labour, access to materials, and above all the authority to mobilise both. In economic terms, they are the result of taxation and tribute systems. Surplus was extracted from the population and concentrated through political and religious institutions.


Temples and rulers operated together. One provided legitimacy, the other enforcement. The system worked because belief and power reinforced each other.


The second insight follows naturally. Money systems do not stand alone. They depend on underlying power structures.

Glossary

  • Taxation - Compulsory transfer of resources to authority
  • Tribute - Payment made by subjects or weaker states
  • Surplus - Production beyond basic survival needs
  • Political authority - Power to enforce rules and extract resources

5. STOP THREE – COFFEE: A MODERN CONTRAST

We pause for coffee and, just as importantly, for cooling. Sitting in an air conditioned café, it becomes clear how different the modern system feels. Payments are immediate, whether by cash, card, or QR code. Prices are visible and standardised. Private enterprise dominates.

And yet, beneath the surface, the function is the same. Goods are exchanged, value is transferred, and systems of trust underpin it all. The form has changed, but the logic has not.

The third insight is that economic systems evolve in appearance, but their core mechanisms remain remarkably consistent.

Glossary

  • Consumption - Use of goods and services
  • Liquidity - Ease of using money for transactions
  • Market pricing - Prices determined by supply and demand

6. STOP FOUR – CITY ARTS & CULTURAL CENTRE: THE SYSTEM EXPLAINED

The Chiang Mai City Arts & Cultural Centre provides the structured explanation that ties everything together. It is also a welcome refuge from the heat.


Inside, the wider context becomes visible. Chiang Mai emerges not as an isolated city but as a node within a regional network linking China, Burma, and Siam. Goods such as teak, rice, and textiles moved along these routes, and with them came flows of value.


Currency developed alongside trade, not before it. In many cases, barter systems persisted, with money introduced gradually as exchange became more complex.

The fourth insight is that trade creates money. The flow of goods comes first, and monetary systems evolve to support it.

Glossary

  • Barter - Exchange of goods without money
  • Trade routes - Paths used for commercial exchange
  • Economic network - Interconnected system of trade and production
  • Monetisation - Introduction of money into an economy

7. OPTIONAL STOP – LANNA FOLKLIFE MUSEUM: THE REAL ECONOMY

If energy allows, we cross to the Lanna Folklife Museum. The scale is smaller, but the perspective is grounded.


Here we see crafts, household production, and the everyday exchange of goods. This is the real economy in its most direct form. Not kings and not temples, but people producing and trading.


The final insight is perhaps the most important. Every system, no matter how elaborate, rests on ordinary human activity.


Glossary

  • Real economy - Production of goods and services in daily life
  • Household production - Goods produced within families
  • Artisanal trade - Small scale skilled production and exchange

8. HEAT STRATEGY – THE REAL CONSTRAINT

Chiang Mai’s heat is not a minor inconvenience. It is the dominant constraint shaping the day. Starting early is essential, finishing before midday is sensible, and constant hydration is necessary. Light clothing helps, but timing matters more.

By late morning the heat index can move beyond comfort into something more limiting. The structure of the walk reflects this reality.


9. WHAT THIS WALK REALLY SHOWS

Seen properly, this is not a sequence of attractions but a coherent system. Temples store wealth, the state extracts surplus, trade moves value, and households produce the underlying goods and services.

Coins and currency are secondary. They are tools within a larger structure.

Understanding that structure is the purpose of the walk.


10. INVITATION

If you are in Chiang Mai and curious, join us.

Thursday 07 May 2026.
07:30 start.
Old City.

A short walk, but a different way of seeing.


11. REFERENCES

  1. Chiang Mai City Arts & Cultural Centre – exhibits on Lanna trade and economy
  2. Chiang Mai National Museum – regional economic history context
  3. Wyatt, D. K. – Thailand: A Short History
  4. Bank of Thailand Museum materials on Thai monetary history

WHAT COULD A "NEW WORLD ORDER" LOOK LIKE

24 April 2026

We hear all the time that NATO’s advance into Ukraine is seen as an existential threat by Russia. But Russia has long been viewed by Europe as an existential threat, going back to the time of Peter the Great, and as an existential threat to America since 1945. Russia has been the West’s historic enemy for a very long time.

Forget Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan. America - the West - is now being defeated by Russia. If this is true, it is extremely serious. It would represent a tremendous psychological blow on top of the military economic and social significance, and would mark the end of Western dominance. Now add the prospect of defeat in Iran, along with the rise of China.

Trump, the “President of Peace” - really? He looks more like The President of Defeat. Sorry to say that as I do not want the West to lose its place, but why did he not do what he said he would do on his election platform?

By stepping up attacks on the BRICS, he has burned the bridges of a possible multipolar deal. All that America can do now is retreat to its own sphere of influence, its “zone of primacy”, and attempt - unsuccessfully - to manage global energy flows.

If you look at a map of the world, there is Eurasia on one side and the Americas on the other. Eurasia has its Mackinder line in Eastern Europe, and America appears to be building a similar line along the first island chain. Where do Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, and Taiwan sit in all this? Which side of the line are they on?

Then consider the consequences in Europe. Europe is pulling away from America - or the reverse, America retreating to its sphere of influence - and is building its own defence industry. This is funded from the public purse, incidentally, unlike its former car industry.

So we see the UK and Germany leading this rearmament. At Airbus Germany dominates the French in that joint partnership. Today it is Germany and the UK, and they sit on opposite sides of the EU divide. It raises a question: what might a rearmed Germany be thinking about once the fighting in Ukraine formally ends and if America steps back?

America Retreating to its Sphere of Influence

When people say America may “retreat to its sphere of influence”, they usually mean its scaling back commitments in Eurasia, reducing military involvement in distant conflicts and prioritising the Americas and nearby regions. In other words, moving from global management to regional dominance.

This would be a major strategic shift akin to Rome retreating behind the Rhine. It implies accepting limits to power rather than trying to shape the entire world order.

If America had any choice, one perspective says the US is overstretched, retrenchment is inevitable and a smaller sphere is more sustainable. Another says the US still has unmatched global reach and withdrawal would create power vacuums that its rivals China and Russia would expand into.

So from a geopolitical Western perspective, a new world order may not mean “retreat”, it may not be a clean shift. It could be uneven, partial, contested and resisted.

Glossary

Existential threat - a danger perceived to threaten the very survival of a state or system

Multipolar - a global system with several centres of power rather than one dominant hegemon

American Sphere of Influence - North America; Central America, South America
The Caribbean. Within this space, the US has exercised influence through:
Military presence and interventions
Economic dominance via trade and finance
Political leverage over governments
This does not mean total control. But it does mean the US sets many of the rules.
Post-1945 System
After 1945, the US built a much wider, global sphere through alliances and institutions. This includes: Western Europe via NATO, East Asia via alliances with Japan, South Korea, and others.
Global financial influence via the US dollar system.
This is not a classic sphere in the geographic sense. It is more a network of:
Military alliances
Trade systems
Financial dominance
In this extended form, some call this a hegemonic system, or an Empire, rather than a sphere.

Hegemony - dominance by one state over others in a system

Alliance system - a network of formal defence partnerships

BRICS - an economic bloc of emerging powers: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa (now expanded)

Monroe Doctrine - a US policy opposing European intervention in the Americas

Western Hemisphere - the Americas as a geopolitical region

Mackinder line - derived from Halford Mackinder’s theory dividing land power (Eurasia) from maritime power

Sphere of influence - a region where a state exerts dominant political, economic, or military control.

Primacy - being the leading or most powerful actor in a system

Retreat (geopolitical) - a reduction in global commitments and reach

Regional dominance - focusing power within a defined geographic area

References

1. Halford Mackinder – Democratic Ideals and Reality (1919)
2. NATO official strategic concepts
3. BRICS expansion reports (2023–2025)
4. Council on Foreign Relations – Global power shifts analysis
https://www.cfr.org
5. Chatham House – Europe defence and autonomy reports
https://www.chathamhouse.org

Thursday, 23 April 2026

EUROPE’S BUILDING A WAR ECONOMY

23 April 2026

OVERVIEW

Europe seems to be finally transforming its defence infrastructure. What began as fragmented national industries is evolving into a networked war economy. This can be made sense of from three recent reports: Eldridge Colby’s critique of European protectionism, the ELSA initiative for joint missile production, and a distributed drone supply chain where sub-assemblies are built in Europe and shipped to Ukraine for final assembly.

This new system largely bypasses the European Union, operates through coalitions and joint ventures rather than treaties, and already has operational consequences, including drone incursions by Ukraine into NATO airspace.

The result is a paradox. Europe is becoming more integrated militarily, but not through its formal institutions. Integration is happening, rather, by circumventing official insitutions and channels, creating both strategic strength but also escalating the risk of more confrontation with Russia.

 From peace to what looks like permanent war

1. The Strategic Shift – Europe Moves To A War Economy Logic

Europe is undergoing a profound shift from a peacetime, rules-based industrial model, to something closer to the logic of a war economy.

This shift has not been formally or officially declared. It is emerging through necessity, driven by the Ukraine war and Europe's fear of Russian expansionism, and the recognition that existing systems are unable to sustain the current high-intensity conflict much longer.

Three strands define this transition. First, the problems. Colby’s critique of the fragmentation of the European industrial base. Second, a prototype solution. The ELSA-style attempt at industrial integration. And third, the already functioning drone supply chain centred on Ukraine.

Taken together, they show a clear direction of travel. Europe is moving from fragmented sovereignty towards networked co-production.


War economy - An economic system organised primarily for sustained military production and conflict readiness.
Fragmentation - A condition where multiple national systems operate separately rather than as a unified whole.


2. Colby – The Critique Of European Protectionism

Elbridge Colby, US Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, provides the intellectual starting point. His argument is direct. Europe cannot sustain a modern industrial war because its defence base is nationally siloed, politically protected, and structurally inefficient. 

When he calls for the removal of protectionist trade barriers, the meaning is operational rather than ideological. He is arguing for the removal of internal frictions that prevent scale, speed, and integration across borders.

In practical terms, this means cross-border production, shared procurement, and the creation of a unified industrial base capable of producing munitions at volume.

The implication is stark though many would say rather obvious. Europe must behave as a single industrial system or it will remain strategically weak, populated by "bonsai armies".


Colby defence framework - A strategic doctrine associated with Eldridge Colby that focuses on great power competition, especially with China, and emphasises a “denial strategy”, rather than confrontation, supported by large-scale industrial capacity and greater burden-sharing by allies, particularly in Europe. It argues that wars are ultimately decided by production, integration, and the ability of allied systems to operate as a single industrial base. 

Protectionism - Policies that favour domestic industries by restricting foreign competition.
Procurement - Government purchasing of military equipment and services.


3. ELSA – The First Concrete Response

The European Long-Range Strike Approach represents an early attempt to respond to this critique in concrete terms.

Led by France and Germany, and involving partners such as United Kingdom and Ukraine, the initiative focuses on developing long-range strike capabilities and integrating missile and drone production across borders.

Its most important feature is institutional rather than technical. It sits outside the formal structures of the European Union. This allows decisions to be taken and relatively quickly, it enables the participation of non-EU states, and it reduces regulatory "red tape".

ELSA is therefore best understood as a prototype. It is not simply a weapons programme but an emerging model for how European defence industry might be organised in the future. Keeping in mind that private sector supply chain integration is well advanced in Europe - examples abound, perhaps the best being Airbus.


Strategic autonomy - The ability to act independently without reliance on external powers.
Mini-lateral - Cooperation between a small number of states outside large institutions.


4. The Drone Ecosystem - Practice Ahead Of Policy

The most advanced form of integration is already operational. This is the distributed drone supply chain centred on Ukraine.

Components are sourced across Europe. Financing and technical support are provided by European states and networks. Final assembly takes place within Ukraine, where systems are adapted rapidly to battlefield conditions.

Recent incidents in Finland and the Baltic states confirm that Ukrainian drones and debris from their operations have entered NATO airspace. This is no longer theoretical. It is documented: drones are launched from Ukraine, they pass into NATO airspace and follow the Polish, Baltic and Finnish borders before entering Russia and striking deep into pre 2014 territory.

At the same time, an important distinction must be maintained. While there is confirmation of Ukrainian drone incursions into NATO airspace, there is no public evidence of deliberate routing through NATO airspace with the consent of NATO governments.

Russia interprets the supply chain itself as evidence of participation. European governments reject that interpretation and maintain a legal and political distinction between support and direct involvement.

The result is a grey zone. Industrial integration is deep and real, but operational responsibility remains contested.


Distributed production - Manufacturing spread across multiple locations rather than a single central system.
Co-belligerency - Being effectively engaged in a conflict alongside another state.


5. The Emerging System - A Europe Outside The EU

When these strands are considered together, a deeper structural change becomes visible. Europe is not reforming its existing institutions in order to meet wartime demands. Instead, it is building a parallel system alongside them.

This emerging system is based on coalitions rather than treaties. It is functionally integrated but politically deniable. It aligns closely with NATO while remaining only loosely connected to EU structures.

The role of the United Kingdom is decisive. Despite being outside the EU, it is central to this evolving system. That alone demonstrates that the future European defence architecture will not be defined by EU membership.

The implication is clear. The real European defence system is taking shape beyond the formal boundaries of the EU. 


Parallel system - An alternative structure operating alongside existing institutions.
Industrial integration - The linking of production systems across countries into a unified network.


6. Risks, Tensions And Contradictions

This transition brings both advantages and risks. Greater integration allows faster production, larger unified market and expected reduction in unit costs, and thus improved military effectiveness. At the same time, it introduces political and strategic tensions.

EU cohesion may be weakened as key functions migrate outside its structures to a new Europe-centred military command. Lines of responsibility become blurred, particularly in areas such as drone operations and supply chains. The risk of escalation with Russia increases as European direct involvement deepens and inevitably becomes more blatant.

At the centre of this lies a fundamental contradiction. Europe seeks efficiency through integration, yet nation states remain reluctant to relinquish sovereignty. This tension is unresolved and will shape future developments.


Escalation - An increase in the intensity or scope of conflict.
Sovereignty - A state’s authority to govern itself without external control.


7. Bottom Line

Europe is moving towards a networked war machine economy.

Colby identifies the structural weaknesses. ELSA represents an early institutional response. The drone ecosystem shows that integration is already happening in practice.

The key insight is that this transformation is not being achieved through formal self-reform. It is being achieved through circumvention of an existing fossilised system.


Networked system - A structure in which multiple independent actors are connected into a coordinated whole.


8. References

Section 2 – Colby

Section 3 – ELSA And European Defence Integration

Section 4 – Drone Incidents And Supply Chains

Section 5 – Structural Analysis

Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Pt. 1 THE NEW MACRO REALITY: THE STRUCTURAL FORCES REPRICING GLOBAL MARKETS

22 April 2026

THE STRUCTURAL REPRICING OF MARKETS IS NOT A CYCLE, IT IS A REGIME SHIFT

1. Overview

This is Part 1 of a two-part analysis. Here, we describe the emerging macro regime: not a temporary cycle, but a structural repricing driven by inflation persistence, geopolitical fracture, energy disruption, and constrained policy. 

In Part 2, we will turn from diagnosis to action and set out how to position portfolios within this new environment.



2. Weakening Dollar And Gradual Reserve Diversification

The US dollar has softened from recent safe-haven highs, reflecting a shift in positioning rather than a collapse in confidence. Recent price action shows a retreat from peak levels as geopolitical stress ebbs and flows. Structurally, the dollar remains dominant, but central banks are steadily diversifying reserves into alternative currencies and gold. This is a gradual rebalancing rather than a regime break. The correct framing is therefore a marginal dilution of dominance within a still dollar-centric system.

Glossary

  • Real yields - Bond yields adjusted for inflation expectations, indicating true purchasing power return.
  • Reserve currency - A currency held by central banks for trade and financial stability.
  • Dollar index (DXY) - A measure of the US dollar against a basket of major currencies.
  • Diversification - The spreading of assets to reduce concentration risk.

3. Elevated Real Yields And A Constrained Federal Reserve

Real yields remain elevated relative to the post-2008 era, creating a persistent headwind for long-duration assets such as growth equities. Higher real yields compress valuations by increasing the discount rate applied to future earnings. At the same time, the Federal Reserve operates within a narrow policy corridor. Inflation remains above target, growth is slowing, and fiscal sensitivity to interest costs is rising. This produces a three-way constraint: cutting risks inflation, holding risks slowdown, and raising risks fiscal strain. The system is not paralysed, but it is tightly constrained.

Glossary

  • Real yields - Interest rates after inflation.
  • Discount rate - Rate used to value future cash flows today.
  • Fiscal sensitivity - Impact of interest rates on government finances.
  • Policy corridor - Range within which central bank policy can move.

4. Persistent And Re-Accelerating Inflation

Inflation has proven more persistent than expected and is no longer on a smooth path back to target. Recent data shows renewed upward pressure, particularly from energy and services. This suggests inflation is becoming partly structural, shaped by supply constraints, geopolitics, and labour dynamics. The earlier assumption of a clean disinflation cycle is no longer credible.

Glossary

  • Inflation - General rise in prices across the economy.
  • Core inflation - Inflation excluding volatile items like food and energy.
  • Sticky inflation - Inflation that is slow to decline.
  • Supply shock - A disruption affecting production or supply.

5. Structurally Exposed Oil Market

Oil prices are elevated and highly sensitive to geopolitical developments. Prices have already exceeded $100 per barrel, with spikes significantly higher during supply disruptions. The key issue is asymmetry: downside is limited by tight supply and steady demand, while upside risk is driven by conflict and constrained transport routes. Price ranges of $125 to $150 are therefore credible under escalation scenarios, even if not the base case.

Glossary

  • Brent crude - Global benchmark for oil pricing.
  • Demand inelasticity - Demand that does not fall much when prices rise.
  • Supply disruption - Interruption to production or transport.
  • Risk premium - Extra price due to uncertainty.

6. Geopolitical Conflict And Energy Security Imperative

Active conflict is disrupting global energy flows, particularly through critical choke points such as the Strait of Hormuz. These disruptions have triggered one of the largest supply shocks on record, highlighting systemic vulnerability. Energy security has therefore shifted from policy preference to strategic necessity. Governments are accelerating investment in domestic production, alternative supply routes, and infrastructure resilience. This represents a durable structural shift.

Glossary

  • Choke point - A narrow route critical to global supply.
  • Energy security - Reliable access to energy supply.
  • Supply chain resilience - Ability to withstand disruption.
  • Geopolitical risk - Risk from political conflict.

7. Trade Fragmentation And Supply Chain Reconfiguration

Global trade is fragmenting along geopolitical lines. Tariffs, sanctions, and strategic competition are reshaping supply chains. The previous model of efficiency-driven globalisation is being replaced by resilience and alignment. This leads to duplication of production, higher costs, and persistent inflationary pressure. It is a structural shift in how the global economy is organised.

Glossary

  • Trade fragmentation - Division of trade into blocs.
  • Tariff - Tax on imports.
  • Supply chain - Network producing and delivering goods.
  • Reshoring - Bringing production back domestically.

8. Slow Growth, Higher Inflation, And Sector Dispersion

The macro regime is evolving into slow growth with persistent inflation pressure. This “stagflation-lite” environment does not imply collapse, but it does imply weaker broad market returns. At the same time, dispersion increases: sectors linked to energy, defence, infrastructure, and resource security outperform, while rate-sensitive sectors lag. Markets shift from broad beta gains to selective, theme-driven performance.

Glossary

  • Stagflation - Low growth combined with inflation.
  • Market dispersion - Variation in performance across sectors.
  • Beta - Sensitivity to overall market movement.
  • Thematic investing - Investing based on long-term trends.

9. Structural Repricing Rather Than Cyclical Adjustment

These conditions point to a structural repricing of assets rather than a temporary cycle. Elevated real yields, persistent inflation, geopolitical disruption, and trade fragmentation combine to create a fundamentally different macro environment. Markets are adjusting to higher costs, increased uncertainty, and more active state involvement. This is not a passing phase, but a shift in the underlying rules of the system.

Glossary

  • Structural shift - Long-term change in economic dynamics.
  • Cyclical movement - Short-term economic fluctuation.
  • Asset repricing - Change in valuation due to new conditions.
  • Capital allocation - How investment resources are distributed.

10. References

  1. Dollar trends and reserve diversification
  1. Real yields and Fed constraints
  1. Inflation persistence
  1. Oil market dynamics
  1. Energy security and conflict
  1. Trade fragmentation
  1. Stagflation and sector dispersion

Friday, 17 April 2026

WILL RUSSIA DEAL WITH UKRAINE'S EUROPEAN SUPPLY CHAIN

17 April 2026

1. The Brutal Logic Of War

Wars do not usually end in tidy negotiations. They end in defeat. Clear, recognisable defeat. The belief that modern imperial  conflicts can be negotiated away is appealing, but history from Rome onwards tells us that the drive for expansion is absolutely ruthless.

American interventions illustrate the point. With the partial exceptions of post-war Japan and South Korea, most campaigns - particularly in West Asia - have struggled to achieve their stated political objectives. Tactical victories, yes, but these have rarely translated into durable political outcomes. America won every battle against Vietnam but lost the war.

So why do these "forever wars" continue?


Military defeat – the point at which a state recognises that it can no longer achieve its objectives buy military means and must concede defeat
Strategic victory – achieving long-term political goals rather than short-term battlefield success

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2. The War Incentive Structure

One explanation lies in incentives. Foreign policy is not driven by pure strategy, still less by any morality. In the case of America, being the hegemon men's answerable to no one and so international law counts for little. Foreign policy is shaped by the convergence of five interests.

 industrial and financial interests.


The Israeli lobby is clearly a powerful force acting on Donald Trump, and is undoubtedly the decider for American policy in West Asia, but it is far from the only pressure point. The decision space around him is crowded and conflicted. The military industrial complex MIC, financial markets esp. banks / bond markets, public opinion, and the long-standing globalist neoconservatives v. the nationalists especially Trump's MAGA base.

All exert their own gravitational pull on the POTUS.

This creates a classic situation of competing imperatives, where policy is less a coherent strategy and more the resultant vector of multiple pressures. In that sense, what we are observing may not be a clean neocon plan, but a negotiated outcome between power centres, explaining in part at least Trump's erratic and inconsistent behaviour.

The military-industrial complex carries on operating regardless of outcomes on the battlefield. In fact, prolonged conflict can be economically beneficial to those producing weapons, systems, and logistics. Duration, in this sense, can matter more than victory.

This is not necessarily conspiracy. It is structure. Large defence industries require sustained and predictably long periods of demand in order to justify the substantial upfront investments required, and war provides it.


Military-industrial complex – the network of defence contractors, governments, and institutions tied to military spending
Incentive structure - the system of motivations that shapes behaviour within institutions
World hegemon - the goal is to remain the global rule-giver 

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3. Europe’s Expanding Role In The Ukraine War

A less visible shift is Europe’s growing role in sustaining Ukraine. Financially, European states are underwriting the Ukrainian state, with estimates often cited in the range of €80–100 billion annually to keep the system functioning.

But the more interesting development is on the production side, where Europe is taking you over from America, mainly in terms of drone production.

Weapons are no longer simply delivered as finished systems. Component parts or sub assemblies are manufactured across Europe – including in the UK – and shipped into Ukraine for final assembly. Ukraine is evolving into a distributed assembly hub rather than just a recipient.


Underwriting – providing financial support to sustain operations
Distributed production – manufacturing spread across multiple locations rather than centralised


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4. Reusing the Airbus Model, For Warfare

The structure increasingly resembles modern auto and aerospace manufacturing. Airbus produces components for its civil and military aircraft across Europe, which are then assembled in final assembly lines in Toulouse and Hamburg.

A similar model is emerging in Ukraine. Multiple suppliers in multiple European and Turkish jurisdictions. Final assembly innumerous FALs close to the theatres of operations.

This creates resilience and flexibility and protects suppliers from attack. But it also creates traceability. Supply chains leave traceable patterns.

Russia has identified elements of this network, suggesting that parts manufacturers and logistics routes are being mapped. This means the war shifts from a battlefield contest to a supply chain contest.


Final assembly line - the FAL, the place where components are brought together to create the finished product
Supply chain - the network from production of sub-units, thriugh transport, to final assembly, and delivery of goods


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5. Drone Warfare And The Border Problem

A defining feature of the conflict is the rise of drones. Increasingly, they account for a large share of battlefield impact, with reports suggesting that perhaps over 90% of casualties are now caused by unmanned systems.

At the same time, the geography of attacks is becoming more complex.

There are now indications that Ukrainian drones are launched from within Ukraine, but then leave Ukrainian airspace and track along the borders of Belarus and the Baltic states on the European side, before turning towards targets deeper inside Russia, including and beyond Saint Petersburg.

This creates a strategic dilemma. Russia is aware of these routes. But what is the response? Intercepting drones over or near NATO territory risks escalation. Not intercepting them invites continued penetration. This is similar to Stalin's dilemma - he wanted to destroy the Bandarites, but feared a nuclear response from America.


Drone warfare – the use of unmanned aerial systems for intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance and attack
Strategic dilemma – a situation where all available responses carry significant risk


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6. Historical Shadows – The Banderite Question

History remains present in powerful ways.

In the aftermath of the Second World War, Soviet authorities faced nationalist movements in western Ukraine, often associated with the Banderites. Stalin might have chosen to deal with these groups more decisively in the immediate post-war period.

However, such actions carried risk. The emergence of the American nuclear arsenal imposed a new strategic constraint. Escalation, even at the regional level, now had potentially existential consequences.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia entered a period of weakness. After the 1990s and early 2000s, some argue that Moscow could have pushed more firmly for neutrality among former Soviet states, rather than allowing America to advance NATO up to its doorstep. 


Banderites – Ukrainian nationalist groups associated with Stepan Bandera and anti-Soviet resistance movements
Nuclear deterrence – the use of nuclear weapons capability to prevent escalation by raising the cost of conflict


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7. From Battlefield To System War

The deeper shift is conceptual.

Modern conflict extends beyond the battlefield into infrastructure, logistics, finance, and the production economy. It becomes a system or "total war", the country runs on a war economy.

If one side targets military assets, the other may target the network that sustains them. Even if production is decentralised, it will still be targeted using drones and high-precision missiles.

The concept of escalation dominance is central here. Drawing on the work of Robert Pape, escalation is rarely one-sided. Each action invites a counter-action, doubling down or raising the stakes with diminishing chance of descending the escalation ladder. This is the trap described in his book.

This raises a difficult question. If infrastructure and bases can be struck by Iran in Israel and Gulf Arab States, could similar logic be applied to production nodes elsewhere, Russia hitting weapons facilities in Europe?

That would represent a major escalation. But it would follow the internal logic of system warfare and should be expected.


System war – conflict targeting the entire economy and network supporting military capability
Infrastructure targeting – attacks on facilities that enable military operations


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8. The Escalation Ladder

All of this points towards a recognisable pattern.

Each move invites a counter-move. Each adaptation triggers another response. Over time, the conflict expands in scope, geography, and intensity.

Strategists describe this as an escalation ladder - a sequence of steps, each more severe than the last.Here are Pape's five rungs for America's war against Russia in Ukraine:

1. Sanctions & isolation
2. Proxy arms supply
3. Deep strike authorization
4. NATO direct entanglement
5. Nuclear threshold

The danger is that once the conflict turns into a hot war, it is very difficult to avoid "the escalation trap".


Escalation ladder – a framework describing progressive stages of increasing conflict intensity
Counter-move – a response designed to offset an opponent’s action


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9. Final Reflection

History suggests that wars do not end because participants choose to stop. They escalate in entirely predictable ways, until one side is obliged to recognise a sound military defeat.

Until then, incentives persist, systems expand, and escalation continues.

The real question is not whether there is an escalation ladder - of course there is - but how to get off it before what some are calling nuclear Armageddon.

Thursday, 16 April 2026

WAR, OIL, AND THE ILLUSION OF CONTROL

15 April 2026

WAR, OIL, AND THE ILLUSION OF CONTROL


Scope
Excludes the character of the occupant in the White House
Excludes consideration of the effect of Israel in this conflict
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1. Overview

Markets are pricing resolution. The system is drifting toward escalation. With two choke points, fragile energy infrastructure, and asymmetric escalation dynamics, the real risk is not a temporary shock but a sustained disruption to flows, pricing, and confidence.


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2. THE MISPRICING – MARKETS ARE LOOKING THE WRONG WAY

The S&P 500 stands close to all-time highs. This reflects a belief in negotiation, stabilisation, and a return to normal energy flows. Yet the underlying structure points in the opposite direction.

Iran has already demonstrated selective control over the Strait of Hormuz, allowing passage on conditional terms. The United States has imposed a parallel blockade targeting Iranian trade rather than neutral shipping per se. At the same time, Washington continues to deploy additional naval assets into the region.

This is not de-escalation - watch what they do not what they say. It is a layered confrontation. Markets are therefore not pricing the system as it is, but as they hope it will become.


Risk mispricing - when markets underestimate the probability or impact of adverse events


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3. THE REAL ENERGY SHOCK – A SYSTEM UNDER STRAIN

The dominant narrative focuses on Hormuz. This is incomplete. The system is better understood as a network of interlocking constraints.

The Strait of Hormuz carries roughly one-fifth of global petroleum flows. A second chokepoint constraint lies at Bab el-Mandeb, through which a further meaningful share of global distribution passes. If proxy forces close or disrupt this route, the Suez Canal effectively ceases to function as a viable corridor.

The effect is not simply additive. It is systemic. Supply chains do not degrade linearly. They fracture.

At the same time, the physical pipeline is already tightening. The last tankers that exited the Gulf before the latest escalation are now reaching European ports - with prices expected from 150 dpb and recorded at 210 in Singapore. There is limited visibility on sustained follow-on shipments under current conditions. This marks the transition from financial pricing to physical shortage.


Choke point - a narrow route where disruption can restrict large volumes of trade


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4. INFRASTRUCTURE RISK – THE HIDDEN ESCALATION

A further layer of risk sits beneath the shipping story. Energy infrastructure itself is vulnerable.

Refineries in Gulf Arab states, and potentially in Iran, represent high-value, low-redundancy targets. Their destruction is not a short-term disruption. Reconstruction timelines are measured in months, often six months or more. During that period, crude may exist but cannot be efficiently processed into usable fuels.

More critically, the Gulf states depend heavily on desalination. In several cases, dependence ranges between 70% and 90% of potable water supply. These plants are exposed, coastal, and difficult to defend comprehensively.

If targeted, the effect is immediate and severe. A loss of desalination capacity is not an inconvenience. It is a civilisational constraint. Urban populations, including capital cities, would face rapid depletion of fresh water supplies. The economic impact would be secondary to the humanitarian and political consequences.

This is a genuine escalation lever. It moves the conflict beyond energy into basic state viability.


Desalination - the process of removing salt from seawater to produce fresh water


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5. ESCALATION DYNAMICS – NO SIDE CONTROLS THE LADDER

The concept of escalation dominance is central here. Drawing on the work of Robert Pape, escalation is rarely one-sided. Each action invites a counter-action.

In this framework, the United States does not possess clean escalation dominance. It can escalate, but it cannot guarantee that escalation will remain contained or produce a stabilising outcome.

This has direct market implications. Uncertainty is not transient. It becomes structural. Volatility is not a spike. It becomes a regime.


Escalation dominance - the ability to control the pace and level of conflict without effective retaliation


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6. THREE SCENARIOS – MARKET PATHWAYS

6.1 air war resumes without a ground incursion

In the first scenario, an air war resumes without a ground incursion. Oil rises as risk premia return and shipping remains constrained. Gold initially benefits from safe-haven demand, but its trajectory becomes unstable as rising yields and a stronger dollar offset the bullish narrative. Equities correct, but not catastrophically, reflecting disruption without systemic breakdown. Industrial metals trade unevenly as supply constraints are balanced against weakening growth expectations.

6.2 coastal landing that fails

In the second scenario, the United States attempts a coastal landing and fails. This is the most destabilising outcome. Oil spikes aggressively as both Hormuz and the Red Sea system become unreliable. Insurance, freight, and physical delivery markets dislocate. Gold benefits from a surge in systemic risk, though it remains intermittently capped by rising yields. Equities move decisively into a risk-off regime, with a deeper and more sustained drawdown. This is the moment when markets shift from pricing disruption to pricing loss of control.

6.3 coastal landing successful

In the third scenario, the United States successfully seizes coastal facilities. The immediate reaction is still risk-negative. Oil rises on escalation, gold strengthens, and equities fall. The medium-term outcome depends on whether this produces stabilisation or retaliation. Given the absence of escalation dominance, the probability leans toward a wider conflict rather than a contained resolution. In that case, markets begin to resemble the second scenario rather than diverging from it.

Glossary
Risk-off - market environment where investors move away from equities into safer assets


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7. PRECIOUS METALS – STRUCTURE AND CONSTRAINTS

Gold remains the primary geopolitical hedge, but its behaviour is more complex than a simple upward trend. Rising oil prices feed inflation expectations, which in turn push up bond yields. Higher yields increase the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets such as gold.

At the same time, systemic risk, currency instability, and geopolitical uncertainty support demand for bullion. The result is a volatile equilibrium rather than a clean trend.

Gold miners do not provide the same exposure. They carry equity beta and are therefore vulnerable to broader market sell-offs. In stress conditions, bullion is the cleaner instrument.

An additional factor is sovereign behaviour. Countries facing higher energy import costs may liquidate reserves, including gold, to fund purchases. This introduces intermittent selling pressure into the market.


Yield - return on a bond, especially government debt
Equity beta - sensitivity of a stock to overall market movements


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8. THE EQUITY MARKET – FRAGILE OPTIMISM

The S&P 500 is not priced for disruption. It is priced for recovery.

Energy cost inflation, supply chain disruption, and rising yields all act to compress margins and reduce valuations. Under all escalation scenarios, earnings expectations weaken.

The vulnerability lies not in current conditions, but in positioning. A market priced for good news is structurally exposed to bad news.


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9. FINAL SYNTHESIS – FLOWS, NOT NARRATIVES

The decisive variable is not war in the abstract. It is control over flows.

At present, control is fragmented. Iran influences passage through Hormuz. The United States constrains Iranian trade. Proxies threaten secondary routes. Infrastructure itself is exposed.

This is not a stable equilibrium. It is a system under strain.

If hostilities resume after 22 April, oil rises in all scenarios, with the strongest move under failed escalation. Gold rises but with volatility shaped by yields and currency dynamics. Equities fall, with the deepest impact where escalation reveals loss of control.

The asymmetry is clear. Upside risk in energy is substantial. Downside risk in equities remains underpriced.


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10. REFERENCES

Reuters – April 2026 coverage on US-Iran conflict, shipping disruption, oil pricing
https://www.reuters.com

U.S. Energy Information Administration – global oil flow data
https://www.eia.gov

IMF – commodity shock transmission mechanisms
https://www.imf.org

Academic framework – Robert Pape on escalation dynamics - The Escalation Trap