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Aluminum’s rebound masks a weakening supply outlook
Aluminum prices have begun to recover from their lowest levels in almost four months, but the rebound appears to reflect technical positioning and renewed speculative interest more than a fundamental tightening of the physical market. Prices rose by as much as 1.1 percent in London after recent losses pushed the metal into territory that some traders considered oversold.
At the same time, Chinese investment funds increased exposure to metal producers and futures contracts in anticipation of strong first-half earnings across the sector. The short-term price movement therefore needs to be separated from the developing supply outlook.
July 6, 2026 -
Europe’s Arctic policy becomes a test of climate credibility
A widening group of European institutional investors is pressing the European Union to preserve its opposition to new oil and gas development in the Arctic, turning the bloc’s forthcoming Arctic policy review into a test of its climate credibility. Six additional investors, including Swedbank Robur, Sarasin & Partners and the French pension fund Ircantec, have joined an open letter calling on Brussels not to weaken its current position.
With the new signatories, the institutional investors backing the appeal now manage more than 1 trillion euros in assets. The intervention is significant because it comes as Norway is lobbying the EU to adopt a more permissive approach toward Arctic petroleum development. Norway is not a member of the EU, but it is deeply integrated into the European economy and has become Western Europe’s most important oil and gas supplier.
July 6, 2026 -
A $2 trillion arms race redefines modern warfare
A new multidimensional arms race is underway across three continents, with more than two trillion dollars pouring into the attempts to master the drones, the hypersonic weapons, the artificial intelligence, and the other emerging technologies that may dominate the future battlefields, a spending spree that mirrors the Cold War nuclear buildups but with more players, less certainty about the impact, and only the shared conviction that getting left behind could be catastrophic.
The dissolution of the arms control architecture marks the race’s departure from the Cold War precedent. The longstanding agreements, the Intermediate Nuclear Forces, the Strategic Arms Reduction, and the Anti-Ballistic Missile treaties, are being ripped up to avoid missing out on the promise of the unstoppable lethality, removing the guardrails that the earlier competition eventually developed.
July 6, 2026 -
China drafts e-commerce rules with countermeasures against foreign curbs
China has released draft amendments to its e-commerce law that would expand the regulatory coverage beyond the platforms and merchants while revising the rules governing the digital economy, a measured recalibration that reflects the calibrated enforcement approach Beijing has adopted toward its technology sector in an era when the economic weakness and the AI competition constrain the regulatory assertiveness that characterized the earlier crackdown.
The proposal, made available for the public consultation by the market regulator and the commerce ministry, adds the regulatory measures alongside the existing penalties while clarifying the rights and obligations across the platform economy, illustrating the institutionalization of the digital governance through the legislative refinement rather than the campaign-style enforcement.
July 6, 2026 -
CMOC, Glencore face July 5 quota forfeiture as DR Congo customs stalls
Major cobalt producers in the Democratic Republic of Congo risk losing some of their first-half export quotas due to an administrative glitch on a customs platform, a bureaucratic failure that threatens as much as 20,000 metric tons of missed shipments worth 1.1 billion dollars at current prices and that illustrates the operational hazards that Congo’s increasingly assertive resource nationalism has created for the world’s largest cobalt producers.
The disruption, colliding with the new directives withdrawing the unused quotas by the July 5 deadline, leaves the producers including CMOC and Glencore, the world’s two largest, caught between the regulator’s use-it-or-lose-it enforcement and a customs platform that has refused their export declarations since July 1.
July 6, 2026 -
India lifts gas supply curbs imposed after Hormuz closure
India has withdrawn the order imposing curbs on its gas suppliers as the liquefied natural gas supply from the Middle East resumes, marking another milestone in the unwinding of the emergency architecture that the Gulf conflict forced upon the world’s energy importers.
The withdrawal of the March measures, which had invoked the force majeure provisions to divert the gas supplies from the non-priority sectors to the key users after the Hormuz closure severed the LNG shipments, signals New Delhi’s judgment that the supply recovery has progressed far enough to restore the normal market allocation that the crisis had suspended.
July 6, 2026 -
Australian households spend A$8.7 billion on batteries as subsidies triple
Australia’s home battery rush illustrates how the distributed energy can circumvent the transmission logjams that have stifled the renewable transitions across the advanced economies, with the hundreds of thousands of households whose subsidized solar-and-battery installation cut monthly power bills around one fifth, driving a boom that offers a template for the countries whose grid bottlenecks the assessment of the European and American integration struggles has documented.
The collective 8.69 billion Australian dollars spent on home batteries in the five months through May, following the government’s decision to more than triple its Cheaper Home Batteries Program to 7.2 billion dollars over four years, has produced installations that exceeded the previous six years combined.
July 6, 2026 -
OPEC+ lifts quotas fifth straight month as Gulf exports lag pre-war levels
OPEC+’s decision to increase its production quotas for a fifth straight month, lifting them by another 188,000 barrels per day from August for a cumulative increase approaching 800,000 barrels per day since April, raises the twin questions of whether the physical supply chains can actually deliver the higher volumes and whether the demand exists to absorb them, questions whose answers hinge respectively on the durability of the Hormuz reopening and the timing of China’s return to the crude market.
The market’s verdict, with Brent trading around 71.72 dollars and below its pre-war close, suggests the futures traders are pricing a return to the oversupply narrative that prevailed before the conflict, a striking normalization that assumes both the supply recovery and the continued demand restraint.
July 6, 2026
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