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Zimbabwe lithium export freeze jolts China futures
China’s lithium market reacted sharply to Zimbabwe’s surprise export suspension because it hit a sensitive point in the battery supply chain: the flow of spodumene concentrate and other upstream material into Chinese converters.
On Thursday, the most active lithium carbonate contract on the Guangzhou Futures Exchange jumped more than 6% in early trading, briefly spiking over 9%, as traders repriced the risk that Zimbabwean feedstock could be interrupted just as lithium demand expectations were already improving.
February 26, 2026 -
China emerges as oil market swing buyer, capping spikes and floors
China functions as an informal price stabilizer in the global crude market, not through official intervention but through the aggregated behavior of state-linked buyers, refiners, and inventory managers. When prices look cheap, China absorbs surplus barrels into storage and keeps imports firm; when prices rise sharply or feel “too expensive,” it quietly steps back, trims discretionary buying, and switches to discounted grades.
Because cargoes are booked weeks or months before they arrive, the effect shows up in trade data with a lag, which is why this mechanism can be underappreciated even though it can materially shape the market’s floor and ceiling. That framing is plausible, and recent price and flow patterns support it.
February 26, 2026 -
EU’s asks China to revalue the yuan, not just cut subsidies
Europe’s message to Beijing is starting to sound less like a generic complaint about subsidies and “overcapacity,” and more like a specific price-of-competitiveness demand: if China wants to redirect more of its export machine toward Europe as U.S. barriers rise, it should stop sitting on an exchange rate that Europeans argue has become deeply misaligned in real terms.
The immediate diplomatic stage for that argument is Friedrich Merz’s first official China trip as German chancellor, where he and Premier Li Qiang both spoke the language of cooperation and free trade, yet Merz simultaneously signaled that the terms of trade can’t keep widening in China’s favor without consequences.
February 26, 2026 -
U.S. solar duties and China WTO case hit India’s PLI playbook
India’s effort to build “factory-state” scale manufacturing capacity is running into a predictable but still painful reality: once subsidies and domestic-preference tools become large enough to reshape trade flows, they stop being treated as internal development policy and start being treated as actionable trade distortion by major partners.
India is being challenged simultaneously from two directions. Washington has moved against Indian solar exports through U.S. trade remedies, while Beijing has escalated a formal WTO dispute targeting India’s incentives for autos and renewable technologies.
February 26, 2026 -
EU steel lobby pushes to put “Made in Europe” steel in Accelerator Act
Europe’s steel lobby is trying to prevent the EU’s next big competitiveness instrument from becoming, in effect, a “clean-tech-only” local-content policy that leaves out one of the bloc’s most politically sensitive and strategically exposed industries.
With the Commission due to unveil its Industrial Accelerator Act next week, Eurofer is arguing that any “Made in Europe” preference attached to public money must explicitly cover steel, especially low-carbon steel, and that the definition of “local” must be tight enough to function as an industrial policy lever rather than a broad procurement label that still channels demand to the very producers the EU says it is trying to defend against.
February 26, 2026 -
Africa’s solar boom hits record 4.5 GW in 2025
Africa’s solar story is shifting from “promising but marginal” to “large enough to matter globally,” and the inflection is being driven by a rare alignment of economics, policy, and urgent need. The continent added about 4.5 gigawatts of new photovoltaic capacity in 2025, a record and roughly a 54% jump from the prior year.
What is just as revealing as the headline number is the breadth underneath it: eight African countries each installed at least 100 megawatts last year, implying the market is no longer confined to one or two early adopters.
February 26, 2026 -
OPEC+ uses Iran-Russia risk premium to “look balanced” into April
OPEC+ is heading into Sunday’s meeting with an unusually convenient shield: a geopolitical backdrop so noisy that it can preserve the appearance of a “balanced market” even as a growing set of physical indicators point toward loosening fundamentals.
The group is leaning toward a cautious April supply increase of about 137,000 barrels per day after a three-month pause tied to seasonally weak demand. If agreed, the move would be framed as confidence, an incremental normalization consistent with OPEC+’s long-running message that 2026 will stay broadly in equilibrium.
February 26, 2026 -
Saudi Arabia pre-positions oil as U.S.-Iran conflict risk rises
Saudi Arabia’s decision to lift output and exports as a contingency against a potential U.S. strike on Iran is a classic example of how the kingdom uses spare capacity and logistics flexibility as a strategic stabilizer, yet the fact it is being activated at all is a reminder that the market is again pricing the Gulf as an active geopolitical risk theater, not a background variable.
Riyadh is increasing production and exports now so it can push more barrels into the system quickly if a disruption hits, with an explicit intention to reverse course later and remain compliant with its OPEC+ quotas if the feared shock does not materialize.
February 26, 2026
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