Daily Summary
Saturday, June 13, 2026
Headlines
Analysis: Asia-to-US Container Rates Spike 109% Since Iran War Started
Analysis: Asia-to-US Container Rates Spike 109% Since Iran War Started
Omar Haddad · Jun 8, 2026
EconomicsWhy LatAm's slow growth isn't fate; it's policy choices
LatAm's slow growth isn't fate—it's policy choices. External shocks matter, but smarter policies can spark a faster recovery or lock economies in low gear.
Clara Weiss · Jun 5
PoliticsCleaner waters, cheaper bills—who pays for the reform?
Cleaner waters, cheaper bills sounds like a win—until you ask who pays. A sharp take on a BBC twofer: a sewage crackdown and lower bills, and the tangled costs behind reform.
Margaret Lin · Jun 4
Why AI Sovereignty Must Not Break Global Innovation
AI sovereignty is sold as independence, yet states outsource when they can't build. Sovereignty won't forge chips or train engineers—the Building the Future Federation shows the gap between mood and policy—and why global innovation can't wait.
Priya Nair · Jun 3
Narrow seas, broad stakes: the new great-power contest
Narrow seas concentrate power and set the terms of great-power competition. Yet the real question is who wins once a strait is contested—and how quickly that leverage diffuses into contracts, balance sheets, and risk models.
Omar Haddad · Jun 1
Romania's Deadlock Endangers Economic Future
Romania's political deadlock isn't a TV drama—it's a macro shock. When power-sharing stalls, budgets lag, permits stall, and private investment falters, risking the economy's future.
Clara Weiss · May 31
Popular this week
Top stories from the last 7 days.
Latest articles
10 articles per page, newest first.
Diversify to Shield Auto Production from Waterways Risks
Diversify to shield auto production from waterways risks. See why clogged channels could disrupt supply chains and how geography-aware resilience beats quick fixes.
Clara Weiss·May 12, 2026·BusinessRethinking the Metal Boom: Scarcity vs Real Demand
Tech demand collides with tight supply, sparking a metals boom and price spikes. Is scarcity a lasting fact or just a market signal—where does real demand actually lie?
Margaret Lin·May 11, 2026·MarketsAORT Stress Tests: History Isn't a Safe Guide
History isn't a safe blueprint for AORT stress tests. Past losses mislead as regimes shift and liquidity dries up, and what looked stable yesterday can reprice tomorrow.
Leo Mercer·May 11, 2026·FinanceWeiss: Time for a Grand Sanctions Strategy
Sanctions aren’t a checklist—they’re a regime. Weiss argues for a Grand Sanctions Strategy as line edits ripple through markets, supply chains, and boardrooms. Liquidity shifts the tone—and capital won’t forget.
Clara Weiss·May 10, 2026·PoliticsWhy Vietnam's Hiring Surge Defies Wage Pressure
Vietnam's 69% hiring plan sparks a paradox: firms expect growth even as wages rise. Will intent translate into real hiring, or is capacity the real bottleneck?
Margaret Lin·May 10, 2026·EconomicsMuddled AI Chip Curbs Will Backfire on Alliances
Muddled AI chip curbs threaten to backfire on alliances, delivering policy jargon to cubicles and factory floors. Critics call it incoherent and unenforceable, foreshadowing fallout across partners.
Maya Torres·May 9, 2026·PoliticsGuardians Not Gadgets: Reclaiming Clinical Judgment in AI Era
Guardians, not gadgets: can clinicians reclaim real clinical judgment in an AI era? Dr Lim Wan Chieh warns against 'Shadow AI' and asks how incentives mold patient care.
Priya Nair·May 9, 2026·AiAmerica's debt pivot reshapes global power
Global debt near $353 trillion sparks talk of a power shift away from the U.S. Yet the numbers aren’t the full verdict—the real story lies beyond the tally.
Margaret Lin·May 8, 2026·MarketsShipping markets overreact to Iran fears; fundamentals matter more
Shipping markets overreact to Iran fears, but the real story is where the pain lands and how it moves. Fundamentals will drive freight, oil, and port costs more than the headline risk.
Omar Haddad·May 8, 2026·WorldTrump’s Pressure Weaponizes Campus Unions
Trump’s pressure weaponizes campus unions, turning federal talk of compliance and risk into leverage. Washington becomes a bargaining partner even when it’s not in the room.
Maya Torres·May 8, 2026·Politics