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- Are markets underpricing geopolitical risks?
Are markets underpricing geopolitical risks?
Oil prices have actually declined in the wake of Iran-Israel
Next steps for Ukraine aid
China’s endemic underconsumption: a cornerstone of dollar dominance
Results of last week’s WB/IMF Spring Meetings in Washington, DC
Coverage of India, Iran-Israel & more
Chart Spotlight: Are geopolitical risks priced in?
In remarks made on Tuesday this week, JPMorgan Chase boss Jamie Dimon stated, among other things, that he’s surprised at oil not rising further amid recent geopolitical tensions.
Brent crude has mostly been trading in the $85-90 range over the past month, though that is still up significantly from around $75 at the beginning of the year.

The man certainly has a point here, especially if energy infrastructure suffers damage in the Middle East and Europe. Yet the Iran-Israel strikes over the past ten days haven’t had a discernible impact.
In fact, oil prices have declined from around $90 to $88 in recent days on the back of slower US business activity and easing concerns over the Middle East. The American cool-off makes good sense, at least.
But with war raging in Ukraine, disruptions to Red Sea maritime traffic, the ongoing Gaza situation, and a series of other conflicts around the world, perhaps markets are becoming desensitized to bad news. At least for now.
In any case, the geopolitical backdrop strikes me as exceedingly gloomy, and perhaps investors are getting complacent about geopolitics, just as they were about inflation around the turn of the year.
Speaking of which, with sticky US inflation and the possibility of another rate rise now on the cards, the double-whammy of an even stronger USD and even higher oil prices would be especially challenging for oil-importing emerging markets. This is not an outcome anyone should want, since the EM/FM universe is awash in dollar-denominated debt.
I’m not the only one in a risk-off mood, with gold currently at record highs. Though skittish sentiment isn’t full-fledged. One of the other main safe haven assets, the yen, is persistently weak, with PMI still below break-even despite some signs of recovery.

I wouldn’t be surprised to see the yen and oil rise in coming weeks given all the smoldering fuses currently inhabiting a geopolitical landscape of powder-kegs.
Deglobalization
Ukraine: US passes Ukraine aid package: what now?
Europe-Russia:
China-Russia:
China:
Chinese "Overcapacity" Is Not the Problem. Underconsumption Is.
China’s Economy - No Walk in the Park
US: The overstimulated superpower
Red Sea: Mediterranean ports warn of overflowing storage yards in latest threat to supply chain
Industrial Policy:
The White House knows that the global south has a point
Long-Distance Industrial Policy for Africa
Manufacturing: The Politics of Manufacturing Decline
Emerging Markets & Developing Economies
IMF/WB Spring Meetings:
International Development Association:
Banga aims for $100 billion in IDA replenishment
The Great Reversal: Prospects, Risks, and Policies in IDA Countries
Health:
New Partnership Aims to Connect 300 million to electricity by 2030
New Financing Tools Receive Major Funding Boost
World Bank operations:
How can the World Bank can be a better partner in global development?
Better Bank Initiative
Co-financing:
IDB Invest, DFC launch co-financing program
Innovative Co-Financing Platform Will Improve Development Impact
Multilateral development banks eye up to $400 billion more lending over 10 years
MDBs publish shared vision for circular economy finance at WCEF 2024
MDBs: Implementing MDB Reforms: A Stocktake
India:
Egypt: Egypt to Get UK Budget Support to Top Off $57 Billion Global Aid
Indonesia: Indonesia raises interest rate to 6.25% in surprise move
Brazil: Brazil has underperformed unfairly and is cheap
North Macedonia: North Macedonia’s presidential election to test commitment to EU accession
Geopolitics
US-Ukraine:
Iran-Israel:
Macro: Quantifying the macroeconomic impact of geopolitical risk
Moldova: Moldova’s Restive Separatists, Russia Worries, and EU Aspirations
Philippines: Calming the Long War in the Philippine Countryside
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