The dominant macro theme is that geopolitics is again feeding directly into prices, policy and business operations. In the UK, the government said a planned fuel duty increase will remain under review as Iran-related tensions lift pressure on energy costs, while mortgage rates have also risen and some deals have been withdrawn amid the market volatility.
That same Middle East strain is showing up in industrial supply chains. Japan’s Tosoh has delayed the restart of ethylene equipment because securing naphtha feedstock has become more difficult, a reminder that petrochemicals remain exposed to disruptions in crude-linked inputs even outside the immediate conflict zone.
Against that backdrop, Asia is still pushing aggressively into future growth sectors. South Korea is considering a 10 trillion won investment in AI through a state fund, Nvidia says it has developed a chip aimed at improving AI inference performance, and the Korea Exchange has delayed the launch of 12-hour trading until September as it continues to upgrade market plumbing.
The longer-horizon growth story is also visible in science and climate. Nasa’s Artemis moon rocket has been cleared for an April launch with four astronauts, underscoring continued public investment in advanced technology, while the final drift of iceberg A23a offers a stark illustration of how environmental change is unfolding over decades, not just quarters.
Together, these developments matter because they point to a world in which short-term inflation risks from energy and financing shocks coexist with heavy spending on AI, strategic industry and science. That mix complicates policy decisions, could keep market volatility elevated, and will shape where growth and capital flow next.