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EU plans targeted aid as Iran War drives up fuel and fertilizer costs
The European Commission is preparing a temporary state-aid framework to shield some of the sectors most exposed to the Iran war’s economic spillovers, especially agriculture, fisheries, road transport, and intra-EU short-sea shipping. The draft would allow member states to use grants, subsidies, tax breaks, and loans through the end of the year, covering up to 50% of the extra fuel and fertilizer costs linked to the crisis.
The proposal is still being discussed with member states and is expected to be finalized by the end of April. The background is that the war has hit Europe through a particularly sensitive channel: fertilizers and transport fuels.
April 16, 2026 -
U.S. nears net crude exporter status as Gulf shock reorders oil trade
The United States is emerging as the world’s emergency oil supplier, but last week’s near-shift into net crude exporter status also showed how close America is to the limits of that role. US crude exports rose to 5.2 million barrels a day, the highest in seven months, while net crude imports narrowed to just 66,000 barrels a day, the lowest weekly level in data going back to 2001. On an annual basis, the last time the US was a net crude exporter was in 1943.
The immediate driver is the war-induced breakdown of normal Gulf supply. With Hormuz disruption cutting deeply into flows from the Middle East, refiners in Europe and Asia have been forced to buy replacement barrels wherever they can find them.
April 16, 2026 -
Gulf disruption pushes aluminium market toward real shortage
The global aluminium market is moving from stress toward something closer to outright shortage, and the Iran war has accelerated that shift in a way that could hit far beyond the metals sector itself. Aluminium sits inside a huge range of industrial chains, from construction, packaging, and transport to transmission infrastructure, autos, defense, and the energy transition.
When supply is disrupted in a market that was already thinly buffered, the consequences do not stay confined to smelters and traders. They start to affect manufacturers’ ability to source basic industrial metal at all.
April 16, 2026 -
Europe Inc reports decent results but grows more cautious
The Iran war is starting to cast a shadow over Europe’s earnings season not because first-quarter numbers are collapsing outright, but because management teams increasingly sound less confident about what comes next. The quarter itself is expected to hold up reasonably well in aggregate, helped above all by energy companies and by the fact that much of the direct disruption only hit the final third of the reporting period.
But across much of corporate Europe, especially in sectors tied to travel, consumer demand, tourism, and supply chains, the war is beginning to darken guidance for the rest of the year. That distinction between reported earnings and forward outlook is central. Analysts still expect relatively solid first-quarter results for the STOXX 600, but the quality of that growth is narrow.
April 16, 2026 -
Oil’s price signals are sending dangerously different messages
The current oil shock is dangerous not just because supply has been lost, but because the market’s two main price signals are now telling radically different stories. In futures, Brent still implies that disruption will ease and that prices will settle back toward something manageable.
In the physical market, by contrast, the message is far more severe: prompt barrels are scarce, non-Middle Eastern cargoes are commanding extraordinary premiums, and refiners are behaving as though supply stress is far from over. That split has become so extreme that Dated Brent has traded around $120 a barrel while some physical North Sea grades such as Forties have pushed close to $150, even as futures have hovered nearer $100.
April 16, 2026 -
Pakistan’s solar turn shields it while Bangladesh pays for LNG dependence
The contrast between Pakistan and Bangladesh is becoming one of the clearest real-world demonstrations of what energy security means in an age of repeated fuel shocks. Both countries were hit hard by the 2022 LNG crisis after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But they responded differently.
Pakistan ended up moving, in a messy but consequential way, toward a consumer-led solar boom that cut its dependence on imported fossil fuels. Bangladesh leaned more heavily into LNG and imported thermal power. The Iran war has now exposed the consequences of those diverging choices.
April 16, 2026 -
DR Congo builds a cobalt reserve to gain more power over supply
Congo’s decision to create a formal strategic reserve for cobalt and other designated critical minerals marks a significant escalation in the state’s effort to manage global supply, influence pricing, and capture more leverage from resources that are central to the battery economy.
Under a decree adopted on April 10, management of the reserve has been handed to ARECOMS, the country’s strategic minerals regulator, which is now authorized to acquire, hold, and market strategic mineral volumes on behalf of the state.
April 16, 2026 -
India’s narrower trade deficit reflects disruption, not strength
India’s narrower trade deficit in March looks better at first glance, but the improvement is not a sign of underlying strength. It reflects disruption. The merchandise trade gap fell to $20.67 billion from $27.1 billion in February, well below market expectations, because both imports and exports dropped as the Iran war disrupted shipping and trade flows through the Middle East. Imports fell 6.5% year on year to $59.59 billion, while exports fell 7.4% to $38.92 billion.
The key point is that India’s trade balance improved because trade itself weakened, especially with West Asia. The commerce ministry said exports to the Middle East fell by about $3.5 billion in March, while imports from the region dropped by $8.7 billion. That larger fall in imports than exports mathematically narrowed the deficit, but it does not represent a healthier external position.
April 15, 2026
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