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  • Clean-tech capital looks less diversified than investors think

    Investors in early-stage clean technology may be far less diversified than they believe, as a small number of large venture funds dominate capital allocation in the energy-transition sector, frequently backing the same companies and thereby concentrating risk in ways that undermine the diversification investors think they are achieving.

    The finding carries significant implications for the financing of the clean energy transition, suggesting that the apparent abundance of capital flowing into the sector masks a structural concentration that could leave both investors and the innovation ecosystem more vulnerable than the headline funding figures imply.

    June 8, 2026
  • China’s LNG buying surge threatens a new gas price squeeze

    China’s liquefied natural gas imports are surging as the country steps up purchases to manage rising electricity consumption during the hotter summer months, marking a significant shift in the world’s largest LNG buyer’s behavior and threatening to intensify global competition for cargoes at a moment when the Gulf conflict has already severed a major source of supply.

    The country’s thirty-day moving average for deliveries has jumped to 178,000 tons per day, the highest since early February before the war began, with volumes rising steadily since mid-April and approaching the five-year seasonal average.

    June 8, 2026
  • China coking coal surge shows mine safety can move global steel

    Chinese coking coal prices have surged to their highest level since 2024 as the aftermath of a deadly mining disaster and the intensified safety inspections that followed continue to constrain supply, illustrating how a single industrial accident can ripple through the commodity markets that underpin the world’s largest steel industry.

    Coking coal futures in Dalian climbed as much as 1.9 percent to 1,486.5 yuan per ton, the highest since October 2024, and are up roughly fourteen percent so far this month, reflecting the persistent supply tightness that the disaster has created.

    June 8, 2026
  • Europe fears a Taiwan crisis it cannot shape or absorb

    A Chinese military drone’s brief incursion into Taiwanese airspace over the disputed Pratas Island in January crystallized a strategic anxiety that has been building across European capitals: that after Ukraine and Iran, the next major global conflict could erupt around Taiwan, and that the European Union is dangerously unprepared for a crisis that would inflict catastrophic economic damage on the bloc while leaving it sidelined from the decisions that would shape its fate.

    The incursion, which China characterized as a routine training mission and Taiwan condemned as provocative, was precisely the kind of gray-zone maneuver that EU officials had gamed out in simulation exercises years earlier, yet when the hypothetical became real, the Europeans had no response.

    June 8, 2026
  • Lithium prices rebound, but the boom looks fragile

    The lithium market has roared back to life after a three-year slump that left the battery metal languishing at rock-bottom prices through much of 2024 and 2025, with the CME lithium hydroxide contract jumping eighty-six percent since the start of the year to trade above twenty thousand dollars per metric ton for the first time since late 2023.

    Yet this recovery, while dramatic, may prove less spectacular and more short-lived than the boom-and-bust cycles that have characterized the volatile history of the lithium market, with the entire price outlook hinging to an extraordinary degree on the fate of a single Chinese mine.

    June 8, 2026
  • China’s e-commerce export engine hits fuel and demand headwinds

    China’s e-commerce export engine, the business model built on flying cheap clothing and goods directly from Chinese factories to shoppers worldwide, is faltering under the combined weight of surging jet fuel costs and weakening demand from lower-income Western consumers, threatening the profitability of the platforms like Temu, Shein, and AliExpress that have reshaped global retail over the past six years.

    The Gulf conflict has emerged as a significant new pressure on a business model that was already strained by the tariffs and customs changes the Trump administration imposed last year, accelerating what analysts increasingly believe may be the end of the hyper-growth era for low-cost cross-border e-commerce.

    June 8, 2026
  • Oil traders are flying blind through the Hormuz crisis

    The largest oil supply shock in decades has entered its fourth month with no resolution in sight, yet the market remains strikingly calm, a disconnect that reveals an uncomfortable truth at the heart of the crisis: the most important drivers of today’s energy market are a constellation of unknowns, and oil prices are being set more by sentiment and expectation than by genuine knowledge of the underlying supply and demand balance.

    This epistemological problem, the fact that traders, analysts, and experts alike are operating largely in the dark, represents perhaps the most dangerous feature of the current moment, because it raises the risk of a sudden and violent repricing if the prevailing assumptions prove wrong.

    June 8, 2026
  • Chinese refiners delay projects as Gulf shock hits margins

    Chinese refiners have delayed two major refinery projects that were scheduled to come online this year, removing a combined 500,000 barrels per day of planned new processing capacity from the market as the Gulf conflict’s disruption of Middle Eastern crude supplies, combined with weakening domestic fuel demand, undermines the economics of bringing new refineries into operation.

    The delays could constrain fresh Chinese oil demand and help cap global crude prices, adding to the broader picture of a Chinese refining sector under acute strain from the convergence of crisis-driven headwinds. The larger of the two delayed projects is the Huajin Aramco Petrochemical refinery in the northeastern city of Panjin, a 300,000 barrel per day facility that is a joint venture between Saudi Aramco, the Chinese state-owned defense conglomerate Norinco Group, and Panjin Xincheng Industrial Group.

    June 8, 2026

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