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Europe’s weak demand contains the Gulf conflict inflation shock
An analysis of eurozone corporate earnings commentary has produced a finding with significant implications for monetary policy: only about a third of the region’s largest companies are raising prices in response to the Gulf conflict, a sharp contrast with the nearly two-thirds that did so following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The divergence suggests that the eurozone’s weak economic backdrop is suppressing corporate pricing power, reducing the risk that the war’s energy shock will translate into the kind of broad-based, self-reinforcing inflation that gripped the region in 2022.
June 2, 2026 -
Commodity super-squeeze tests the limits of global inventories
The current state of global commodity markets has been characterized as a “super-squeeze,” a distinctive form of bull market driven not by the surging demand that powered previous commodity supercycles but by the supply disruptions emanating from the Gulf conflict, and conditions will deteriorate sharply if the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed.
The framing captures a fundamental shift in the nature of commodity market dynamics, one in which the constraint is not insufficient production capacity meeting booming consumption but rather the physical inability to move available supply through a blockaded chokepoint to the markets that need it.
June 2, 2026 -
Fertilizer, fuel and freight turn Gulf crisis into food shock
The Persian Gulf produces little of the world’s food, yet the conflict engulfing the region is reverberating through every link of the global food system, from the fertilizer that nourishes crops to the fuel that powers farm machinery to the packaging that wraps finished products on supermarket shelves.
The cumulative effect threatens to transform what began as an energy supply shock into a global food security crisis, with the United Nations World Food Programme warning that a prolonged conflict could push global hunger to record levels.
June 2, 2026 -
Chinese automakers turn EU tariffs into a local manufacturing push
Chinese automakers are mounting a coordinated and accelerating assault on the European automobile market, leveraging competitive pricing, advanced electric vehicle technology, and an increasingly sophisticated strategy of local manufacturing to break into a market that European and American brands have dominated for over a century.
The expansion has progressed from simple vehicle exports toward the establishment of European production facilities, joint ventures with established Western carmakers, and the acquisition of underused factories, marking a qualitative shift in how Chinese firms are pursuing market share on the continent.
June 2, 2026 -
Aluminum hits four-year high as Gulf supply crisis worsens
Aluminum prices have surged to their highest level in more than four years as renewed military exchanges between the United States and Iran escalated supply risks across the Middle East, pushing the metal to the top of the industrial commodities complex amid an increasingly severe physical squeeze.
Benchmark aluminum on the London Metal Exchange touched 3,707.50 dollars per metric ton, matching a late-May peak and reaching its highest point since March 2022, when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine first sent metal markets into turmoil.
June 2, 2026 -
Trump refines metals tariffs as protectionism meets cost reality
President Trump has signed a proclamation refining his Section 232 national security tariffs on steel, aluminum, and copper imports, introducing a more granular and selective tariff structure that lowers duties on certain manufactured products while adding new categories to the protective regime.
The adjustments, effective June 8 and scheduled to remain in place through the end of 2027, represent an attempt to balance the administration’s protectionist objectives with the practical recognition that blanket high tariffs on metal-containing products were inflicting collateral damage on American manufacturers, farmers, and consumers.
June 2, 2026 -
U.S. crude surge cannot close Asia’s Hormuz supply gap
A record surge of American crude oil is flowing into Asia, but the unprecedented volumes fall dramatically short of replacing the cargoes lost to the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, leaving the world’s largest oil-consuming region facing a supply deficit that no amount of redirected American supply can fill.
The arithmetic is stark: while US crude shipments to Asia are rising toward record levels, the loss of Gulf cargoes that normally transit Hormuz dwarfs the additional American barrels by a factor that makes the gap unbridgeable through trade reallocation alone.
June 2, 2026 -
China’s oil reserves let it sit out the price shock
China is preparing to draw more deeply on its record crude oil inventories as refiners cut imports further and maintain production curbs designed to minimize the losses they face from processing expensive crude into fuel sold at government-capped prices.
This combination of inventory drawdown, import reduction, and output discipline is serving a dual purpose: insulating the Chinese economy from the Gulf conflict’s price shock while simultaneously, and incidentally, helping to cap global oil prices, which fell nineteen percent in May even as the Strait of Hormuz remained largely closed for a third consecutive month.
June 2, 2026
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