Sunday, 24 May 2026

Blockade of Strait of Hormuz: A Symptom, Not the Disease

The rising tension surrounding the Strait of Hormuz is once again dominating global headlines. Yet portraying the crisis merely as a maritime security dispute risks missing the broader geopolitical picture. The threat of disruption in one of the world's most critical energy corridors is not an isolated event; it reflects deeper and long-standing strategic tensions in the Middle East. Military posturing at sea may be the visible manifestation of the crisis, but the roots extend far beyond naval deployments.

At the center of the dispute lies the decades-long confrontation between the United States and Iran, shaped by disagreements over Tehran's nuclear ambitions, missile capabilities, regional influence, and economic sanctions. Successive rounds of sanctions have sought to pressure Iran into altering its strategic behavior, while Iran has argued that these measures amount to economic coercion intended to weaken its sovereignty and limit its regional role.

Supporters of sanctions maintain that economic pressure remains an important instrument for preventing nuclear proliferation and deterring regional escalation.

Critics, however, argue that prolonged sanctions have often generated unintended consequences, hardening positions rather than creating space for sustainable diplomacy. This divergence reflects one of the most enduring debates in international relations - whether coercive pressure changes behavior or merely deepens confrontation.

Questions regarding global non-proliferation policies have further complicated the debate. Critics often point to perceived inconsistencies in the international system, particularly concerning different approaches toward regional nuclear capabilities. Such perceptions, whether fully justified or not, contribute to mistrust and reinforce narratives of unequal treatment.

The Strait of Hormuz therefore should not be viewed solely through the narrow lens of maritime access or freedom of navigation. Any temporary reduction in tensions at sea may provide immediate relief to energy markets, but lasting stability is unlikely to emerge without addressing the wider political and economic disputes that continue to fuel confrontation.

The lesson is straightforward - blockades and naval tensions are symptoms of deeper geopolitical fractures. Addressing the symptom may calm markets for a time, but durable stability requires resolution of the underlying political disputes that continue to shape the region's strategic landscape.

Saturday, 23 May 2026

Washington’s Flawed Energy Geopolitics

The persistent volatility in global energy markets is less a reflection of physical supply deficits and more a testament to weaponized energy supply. A cold analysis of data confirms there is no genuine global oil shortage. Instead, what the world is witnessing is a meticulously manufactured crisis, orchestrated by Washington in a desperate bid to dominate global oil production and its critical logistical chokepoints.

The centerpiece of this strategy relies heavily on calculated disruptions, particularly around the highly sensitive Strait of Hormuz. Yet, the Trump administration’s aggressive maneuvers have failed to achieve their ultimate economic target - driving crude prices up to US$200 per barrel mark. While the market remained resilient against these artificial supply shocks, the underlying motives of American interventionism have become glaringly obvious.

Through this manufactured instability, Washington has attempted to kill two birds with one stone. First, by keeping the market in perpetual anxiety without letting prices completely boil over to catastrophic levels, it successfully squeezed and manipulated the oil revenues of traditional Arab exporting nations, altering their fiscal leverage. Second, and perhaps more critically, the engineered friction along maritime routes are aimed at containing and throttling the steady flow of vital energy supplies to China’s industrial engine.

For developing economies, this artificial premium adds an unnecessary layer of import-led inflation. Global stakeholders must recognize that the current energy narrative is driven by geopolitical chess rather than the fundamentals of demand and supply. The international community must push for transparent, unhindered maritime logistics to insulate the global economy from unilateral hegemonic control.

Washington Must Admit Defeat in Iran

When the joint US-Israel military campaign against Iran commenced on February 28, the White House projected absolute, unyielding confidence. "Operation Epic Fury" was sold to the public as a swift, high-impact initiative designed to permanently dismantle Tehran’s regional influence and force absolute nuclear concessions. Today, nearly three months later, the comforting illusions have shattered. Washington may have dominated the initial tactical battles, but let us be entirely clear - the United States has fundamentally lost this war.

The primary miscalculation lies in a fatal, outdated belief that modern asymmetric warfare can be won purely through kinetic superiority. While waves of airstrikes successfully degraded conventional military infrastructure, they completely failed to account for Iran’s ultimate economic equalizer: its chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz. By throttling one-fifth of the world’s energy supplies, Tehran triggered devastating geoeconomic shocks that rapidly rippled across global markets—sending international oil prices soaring and destabilizing regional financial hubs like the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX).

Instead of isolating Iran, the conflict has backfired spectacularly on the domestic front. Skyrocketing gasoline prices and dipping approval ratings ahead of the crucial mid-term elections have severely compromised the Trump administration’s political leverage. Tehran, acutely aware of this vulnerability, recognizes that it does not need to achieve military parity; it merely needs to survive the onslaught to outlast the political timeline of its adversary.

Now, more than six weeks into an uneasy ceasefire, the sudden diplomatic push from Washington reveals an act of political desperation, not a pursuit of peace. The intensifying pressure to force Tehran into a ceasefire under Trump’s strict, maximalist conditions is a classic "ceasefire trap." It is a calculated, coercive maneuver designed to retroactively manufacture a paper victory out of a stalemated conflict on the ground.

As noted by regional analysts and highlighted in recent reporting by Reuters, a war designed to be a short-term romp has evolved into a long-term strategic failure. Forced capitulation on paper cannot mask the reality that Iran's core command structures, proxy networks, and buried uranium stockpiles remain entirely intact.

Rather than doubling down on a broken strategy or masking defeat with coercive diplomacy, it is time for the United States to mend its severe strategic mistake. Overwhelming military power is no longer enough to dictate the terms of global order, and continuing this entanglement will only deepen the damage to American credibility abroad.

Friday, 22 May 2026

Hostile Takeover of US Primaries by Billionaires

The integrity of democratic governance relies heavily on the transparency of its introductory gatekeepers - the political primaries. While international attention remains fixated on the theater of the general elections, a highly sophisticated, billionaire-backed financial apparatus is quietly engineering a structural overhaul of the electoral menu. 

Recent investigative disclosures have exposed a coordinated network of political action committees (PACs), shadow consultants, and dark-money conglomerates acting as a de facto "party within the party." This machine systematically distorts the democratic process long before the broader electorate ever reaches the ballot box.

From a structural standpoint, the strategy is calculated to maximize return on political investment. Primaries are historically low-turnout, low-visibility contests. In these economically vulnerable entry points, a heavily concentrated injection of capital yields outsized influence.

Billionaires and corporate interest groups are leveraging dark-money channels to finance saturated, highly targeted media campaigns. This capital asymmetry effectively suffocates grassroots contenders, forcing an artificial curation of candidates aligned with a centrist, corporate-friendly agenda. Because these transactions are deliberately obscured from public tracking, the fundamental relationship between representative and constituent is severely compromised.

This phenomenon extends far beyond campaign finance irregularities; it represents an existential threat to economic equity and fair representation. When elite donor classes capture the primary gateway, they effectively establish a "shadow veto" over macro policy.

Critical structural reforms—ranging from regulatory corporate accountability and tax normalization to robust economic justice initiatives—are preemptively sidelined. The result is a governance framework designed to insulate capital rather than serve the public interest.

If democratic systems are to retain institutional credibility, regulatory bodies must intervene, Congress must urgently implement stringent legislative reforms enforcing absolute disclosure of all political expenditure and multi-organizational coordination.

The power of the primary must be salvaged from private capital capture and restored to a merit-driven, community-oriented framework. Transparency is no longer a policy preference; it is the baseline requirement to prevent the absolute corporatization of the state.

PSX benchmark index up 1.4%WoW

Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) posted recovery throughout the week, after jitter on the first trading day. The benchmark Index gained 2,248 points or 1.4%WoW to close at 167,844 points on Friday, May 22, 2026. Market participation declined, with average daily trading volume plunging to 747 million shares.

The dominant sentiment driver remained the prevailing US-Iran conflict, where early-week drone strikes on UAE nuclear facilities and Saudi Arabia weakened investors’ confidence.

However, sentiment recovered from the second trading session onward after US Vice President Vance confirmed progress in diplomatic talks, with both Pakistan’s Interior Minister and Field Marshal Asim Munir traveling to Tehran to help finalize a draft agreement.

Foreign exchange reserves held by State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) surged to US$17.1 billion as of May 15, 2026 due to IMF disbursements under EFF and RSF programs.

Pakistan’s current account posted a deficit of US$324 million for April 2026, as compared to US$12 million for the same period last year, as higher energy import costs widened the trade gap.

IT exports increased by 33%YoY to US$423 million for April 2026.

Urea offtakes surged by 85%YoY to 463,000 tons in April 2026.

Other major news flow during the week included: 1) Pakistan secured a US$1.2 billion Saudi oil facility alongside a US$320 million AIIB loan for N-5 highway reconstruction, 2) Pakistan and IMF agreed on FY27 macro framework with GDP growth at 4.1%, CPI at 8.6% and primary surplus at 2% of GDP, 3) T-Bill yields rose across all tenors during this week’s auction, 4) Government approved sale of 51% to 100% stakes in IESCO, GEPCO and FESCO, and 5) Pakistan reopened offshore oil and gas exploration after an 18-year pause, signing 23 deep-water block agreements with immediate investment of US$82 million.

Top contributing sectors were Oil & Gas Marketing Companies, Leather & Tanneries, and Technology & Communication, while the laggards included                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           Textile Spinning, Leasing Companies, and Tobacco.

Major selling was recorded by foreigners, amounting to US$14.2 million. Major buyers were Insurance and Individuals with US$13.4 million and US$3.7 million respectively.

Top performing scripts were: PTC, SCBPL, SRVI, PIOC, and UBL, while laggards included:  GADT, MEHT, CNERGY, AICL, and MTL.

According to AKD Securities, Iran-US negotiations, oil prices and FY27 budget finalization remain key near term catalysts. Prime Minister’s visit to China (May 23-26) and any ceasefire development serving as potential positive triggers.

Top picks of the brokerage house include: OGDC, PPL, UBL, MEBL, HBL, FFC, ENGROH, PSO, LUCK, FCCL, INDU, ILP and SYS.

 

Why US-Iran Ceasefire is a Dangerous Farce

The Islamabad talks are a masterclass in diplomatic theater, a performative exercise in negotiation that achieves nothing because Washington as well as Tehran desire peace on their terms. The temporary, Pakistan-mediated truce is not a stepping stone to a lasting ceasefire; it is a tactical breathing room used by two intransigent regimes to rearm, recalibrate, and prepare for the next, more violent escalation.

The primary catalyst for this endless delay is the delusion of total victory harbored by both sides. The Trump administration is treating these negotiations as a victory lap, operating under the flawed assumption that military strikes and severe economic pressure have brought Iran to the brink of collapse.

By demanding a "zero enrichment" standard, the total dismantling of Iran’s ballistic missile program, and the abandonment of its regional proxies, Washington is not offering a ceasefire. It is demanding unconditional capitulation from a sovereign state—a non-starter in the real world of geopolitics.

Tehran is equally detached from reality. While its domestic economy is in freefall and its infrastructure is heavily bruised, the Iranian regime remains obstinately defiant. By exploiting its geographic chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz—arbitrarily vetting ships and extorting "security fees"—Iran has weaponized global oil supply chains to hold Western economies hostage.

Tehran's insistence on immediate, permanent sanctions relief before making a single tangible concession on its nuclear program demonstrates a fundamental refusal to acknowledge its weakened position.

Compounding this gridlock is the duplicitous, bipolar messaging coming from both capitals. Washington arrogance—boasting that it is in "no hurry" while holding a gun to Iran's head—is met with Tehran’s stubborn pride, which views any compromise as a threat to regime survival.

The current truce is a diplomatic fiction. By demanding compromise on their maximalist demands, both the United States and Iran are guaranteeing that this pause in hostilities will inevitably fracture, dragging the region into an even deeper, catastrophic conflict.

First Woman to Lead Panama Canal

The Panama Canal’s Board of Directors has appointed engineer Ilya Espino de Marotta as Administrator of the Panama Canal for the period 2026–2033. 

The decision is the result of a national and international process of searching for, consulting with, and evaluating the profiles of Panamanian professionals, in line with the present and future challenges facing the Canal. 

“The legitimacy of this decision is underpinned by the independence of the process, the technical rigor of the method applied, and serious, objective institutional deliberation guided by the best interests of the Canal and the country,” said Jose Ramon Icaza, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Panama Canal Authority as he made the official announcement.

The 64-year-old engineer will hold the post for seven years from 1 October 2026 until 2033, replacing the current administrator, Ricaurte Vásquez.

 “I have spoken with the new Administrator of the Panama Canal... to congratulate her and reaffirm our commitment to working together on strategic projects that generate employment, prosperity and progress for Panamanians,” Panama President Jose Raul Mulinowrote on his social media account X.

The new administrator and first woman to lead the Panama Canal Authority, is a marine engineer from Texas A&M University. She holds a master’s degree in engineering economics from Panama’s University of Santa María La Antigua and has completed executive training at INCAE and the Kellogg School of Management. 

She has over 40 years’ experience working at the Panama Canal in technical, operational and leadership roles, and was appointed in 2019 Deputy Administrator and subsequently Sustainability Officer.

Posing worldwide with her pink hard helmet, she became the face of the Canal expansion as she took over the project of the third set of locks when its director Jorge Quijano became Panama Canal Administrator in 2012, being the world’s first woman leading such an infrastructure construction. 

Following the inauguration of the expanded waterway in 2016, she has led high-impact key initiatives in water management, sustainability and modernization, distinguishing herself through her ability to manage complex projects and represent the institution internationally.

“I thank the Board of Directors for this vote of confidence and for granting me the privilege of continuing to contribute to my country. I pledge to continue doing my utmost for our country, supporting our clients and ensuring the strategic planning we have in place so that Panama continues to grow. I extend my deepest gratitude to my family for these 40 years of service, and I will continue to dedicate myself fully to the Panama Canal workforce,” said Marotta.

Courtesy: Seatrade Maritime News