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Europe’s EV boom accelerates China’s automotive advance
Demand for electrified vehicles continued to drive growth in Europe’s auto market in May, offsetting a sharp decline in petrol and diesel sales while allowing Chinese brands to dramatically expand their footprint, illustrating the twin dynamics reshaping the European automotive landscape: the accelerating shift toward electrification and the rising penetration of Chinese manufacturers.
Total car registrations rose 3.6 percent to over 1.15 million vehicles in May, with electrified vehicles accounting for more than two-thirds of all new registrations, demonstrating the decisive shift in consumer preference toward the electric and hybrid technologies.
June 23, 2026 -
China’s renewable push shifts from building to using
China has laid out broad new rules mandating increased use of renewable energy, marking a significant shift in the focus of its energy transition from building new generation capacity toward ensuring that the clean electricity it has built actually gets consumed. Starting August 1, the central government will set binding targets for the percentage of electricity and non-electric energy that must come from renewable sources, a regulatory approach that addresses the critical challenge of utilization that has emerged as China’s renewable buildout has outpaced the grid’s capacity to absorb the clean power it generates.
June 23, 2026 -
Beijing’s tech enforcement stops short of another crackdown
Beijing has stepped up corporate regulatory enforcement this year, opening antitrust probes, summoning tech giants, and imposing food-safety penalties, yet analysts judge that the campaign is unlikely to repeat the devastating 2021 crackdown that wiped out more than a trillion dollars from Chinese tech stocks.
The distinction reflects the fundamentally changed circumstances confronting Beijing, which now needs the private-sector confidence, jobs, and technology investment that the earlier crackdown destroyed, particularly as the intensifying AI competition with the United States makes the leading technology companies essential to the country’s strategic ambitions.
June 23, 2026 -
Lithium prices swoon on speculation over CATL mine restart
Chinese lithium futures have shed about nine percent in two days on unconfirmed speculation that one of the world’s biggest mines for the battery metal may restart soon, illustrating once again the extraordinary sensitivity of the lithium market to the fate of the CATL Jianxiawo mine whose closure drove the metal’s recovery.
The price decline followed a preliminary government land assessment notice that fueled investor bets on the mine’s reopening, despite the notice neither confirming any resumption plan nor appearing to be anything more than a procedural step related to land use.
June 23, 2026 -
Market timing concentrates risk in a single moment
The concept of diversification, a cornerstone of prudent investing, extends beyond the familiar dimensions of spreading risk across stocks, asset classes, and regions to encompass a less recognized dimension: time.
Just as no prudent investor would build a portfolio around a single stock, the argument runs, investors should be wary of concentrating their exposure in a single time frame, yet many do exactly that when they place large bets on the market’s short-term performance through aggressive market timing.
June 23, 2026 -
Gulf shock sets off a global race for oil reserves
The vulnerable countries that paid a high economic price during the Gulf conflict are now seeking to build domestic oil and gas storage buffers against future shocks, a drive that could generate roughly half a billion barrels of additional demand and that reflects the central lesson of the crisis: that impossible disruptions can happen, last longer than expected, and hit hardest where there is no cushion.
The rush to build strategic reserves, combined with the need to refill the inventories depleted during the conflict, could amount to roughly a billion barrels of additional demand, providing significant price support even if spread over several years.
June 23, 2026 -
Trump’s drilling push shifts environmental costs to the public
The Trump administration has proposed looser rules for oil and gas drilling on federal lands, including a dramatic reduction in clean-up costs for abandoned wells, advancing the broader deregulatory agenda aimed at boosting domestic fossil fuel production.
The proposals, which would slash the cost of statewide drilling bonds, shorten public participation in permitting, and roll back methane emission requirements, reflect the administration’s commitment to reducing regulations on the energy industry and easing investment in domestic fossil fuel production, a priority that the Gulf conflict’s demonstration of energy security concerns has reinforced.
June 23, 2026 -
Japan bets $2.3 trillion on strategic technology leadership
Japan plans to set a target of about 2.3 trillion dollars in combined public and private investment by 2040 across seventeen strategic sectors as part of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s new growth strategy, a substantial commitment that reflects the determination to use government spending to catalyze private investment in the technologies and industries deemed critical to economic security.
The 370-trillion-yen initiative, focusing on areas including artificial intelligence, semiconductors, and space development, illustrates the broader pattern of state-directed industrial strategy that nations are adopting to secure their position in the technologies that will define economic and strategic competitiveness in the coming decades.
June 22, 2026
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