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  • Mongolia overtakes Indonesia as China reorders coal supply chains

    Mongolia has overtaken Indonesia as China’s largest coal supplier for the first time, shipping 11.33 million metric tons across the border in April compared to Indonesia’s 11.12 million tons, a milestone that reflects a broader reconfiguration of Chinese coal procurement patterns driven by the convergence of rising domestic production, depressed coastal market pricing, and the logistical advantages of overland supply during a period of maritime disruption and uncertainty.

    The shift is dramatic in scale. Mongolian coal shipments to China surged sixty-one percent year on year in April, while Indonesian volumes fell twenty-two percent over the same period. Over the first four months of 2026, Mongolia has shipped 39.37 million tons against Indonesia’s 61.43 million, meaning Indonesia retains the cumulative lead but the gap is narrowing at a pace that suggests Mongolia could challenge for the full-year title if current trends persist.

    May 22, 2026
  • Asian jet fuel cargo to France shows Europe’s supply route barely reopening

    The first jet fuel cargo to travel from Northeast Asia to Europe since the Gulf conflict began has been loaded and is now en route to France, a single shipment that would barely merit attention under normal market conditions but that in the current environment serves as a closely watched indicator of whether the trans-Asian aviation fuel trade that Europe depends on for marginal supply is beginning to reopen.

    Approximately 745,000 barrels of jet fuel were loaded at Yeosu in South Korea in early May, transferred to a larger vessel near the Strait of Malacca around May 18 to 21, and are now headed for French delivery, with trading house Vitol chartering both vessels involved in the operation.

    May 22, 2026
  • Copper trades like tech as AI power demand reshapes the market

    Copper is behaving less like the industrial bellwether it has been for a century and more like a technology growth stock, with its price movements tracking the fortunes of Nvidia and ASML more closely than the manufacturing PMI data and Chinese construction activity that traditionally governed its trajectory. The metal climbed to a record close last week, retreated when AI-related equities hit turbulence, then rallied again on Friday as tech sentiment recovered.

    This correlation reflects a fundamental shift in how investors understand copper’s demand story: the metal’s role in the transmission lines, transformers, switchgear, and electrical infrastructure required to power the AI revolution has become the dominant narrative driving speculative and institutional flows into the market.

    May 22, 2026
  • France’s solar-nuclear surplus shows the value of energy independence

    France’s electricity grid is experiencing a remarkable surplus as a burst of sunny weather across the country has pushed solar generation above twenty gigawatts, combining with nearly forty gigawatts of nuclear baseload output to produce far more power than the nation can consume.

    The resulting overflow is being exported to neighboring markets at volumes exceeding fifteen gigawatts, sending cheap French electricity into Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom at a moment when all three are contending with energy costs inflated by the Gulf conflict.

    May 22, 2026
  • China’s rare earth cutoff turns Japan’s supply risk into reality

    China has effectively severed Japan’s access to several critical heavy rare earth materials and specialty metals for at least four months, with customs data showing that exports of dysprosium, terbium, yttrium oxide, and gallium to Japan have ceased almost entirely since December.

    The cutoff, which began shortly after a diplomatic confrontation over Taiwan erupted in November, represents the most consequential weaponization of rare earth supply since China’s 2010 restrictions against Japan following a maritime territorial dispute, and it is already forcing Japanese manufacturers to ration materials and turn away customer orders.

    May 22, 2026
  • Indonesia’s coal export plan adds risk to Asia’s energy security

    Indonesia has sent shockwaves through global coal markets by announcing that all exports of coal, palm oil, and ferroalloys must be routed through a state-controlled trading entity, a sweeping intervention into the commodity supply chains of the world’s largest thermal coal exporter at precisely the moment when Asian power generators are leaning most heavily on Indonesian coal to compensate for the Gulf conflict’s disruption of LNG supply.

    President Prabowo Subianto framed the measure as a revenue enhancement and currency stabilization tool, but the announcement has left miners, traders, and importing nations scrambling to understand how a policy with enormous practical implications will actually work.

    May 22, 2026
  • Europe’s gas security now depends on a difficult refill season

    Europe’s gas security problem is moving from a winter crisis narrative to a summer stockpiling crisis. The immediate risk is not that households will run out of gas tomorrow, but that Europe may fail to rebuild enough storage before the next heating season if the disruption around the Strait of Hormuz continues.

    Senior Equinor executives have warned that if the closure of the waterway persists for another one to three months, the continent’s gas storage position could become critical. That warning matters because Europe entered the refill season with unusually low stocks, distorted price incentives and a global LNG market already strained by the Iran war.

    May 22, 2026
  • Crude’s retreat shows demand destruction, not real stability

    The oil market has delivered a counterintuitive response to what should have been one of the most explosive supply shocks in modern history. When physical crude prices surged above $160 a barrel in late March, many traders and analysts expected a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz to push prices into a full-scale crisis.

    Five weeks later, however, with the waterway still largely closed and peace negotiations stalled, prices have not continued rising. Instead, they have retreated to roughly $100 to $110 a barrel. That decline does not mean the supply shock has disappeared. It means the market has temporarily absorbed the disruption through demand destruction, emergency substitution, refinery cutbacks, inventory drawdowns and a surge in U.S. exports.

    May 22, 2026

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