Friday, 19 June 2026

PSX benchmark index up 4%WoW

Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) witnessed positive momentum during the week ended on June 18, 2026, driven by a promising US-Iran deal causing oil prices to fall below US$80/ bbl, a 3-month low, alongside a favorable budget for most sectors including Cement, Steel, Refineries, Textile, Pharma and Tech, coupled with reduction/ elimination of super tax for individuals and corporates. The sentiments were further supported by a status quo by the central bank in its Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting on Tuesday. However, the postponement of commencement of technical talks between US and Iran during Friday’s early hours slightly tempered the momentum on the final day, despite an overall positive week. The benchmark Index gained 6,523 points or 4%WoW, to close the week at 178,923 points. Market participation improved considerably, with average daily trading volume increasing by 53%WoW to 1.4 billion shares, as against 900 million shares in the prior week.

On the macroeconomic front, Current Account showed a surplus of US$459 million in May 2026, as against a deficit of US$44 million in same period last year.

IT exports rose 13%YoY to US$373 million during the same month.

Yields in the first PIB auction following the recent MPC declined by to 12.14%, 12.09%, 12.19%, and 12.61% for 2, 3, 5 and 10 year tenors, respectively.

LSM index rose 6.4%YoY in 10MFY26.

Urea offtakes remained flat YoY at 419,000 tons in May 2026 and DAP sales fell 36%YoY due to higher prices.

Other major news flow during the week included: 1) oil and gas shipments through Strait of Hurmuz commenced after signing of MOU between United States and Iran, 2) foreign exchange reserves held by SBP rose to US$17.2 billion as of June 12, 2026, 3) Power generation declined 1% in May, 4) Power sector circular debt rose to PKR1.9 trillion in 10MFY26, and 5) Textile exports rose 2%YoY to US$16.7 billion in 11MFY26.

Top performing sectors were: Vanaspati & Allied Industries, Transport, and Jute, while laggards included: Property, Woolen, and Sugar & Allied Industries

Major buying was recorded by Mutual Funds of US$63.4 million. Major selling was recorded by Insurance amounting to US$59.7 million.

Top performing scrips were: SSOM, PSX, SNGP, SSGC, and FATIMA, while laggards included: JVDC, HCAR, TRG, BNWM, and ATLH.

According to AKD Securities, compliance of peace deal along with positive outcomes of technical talks between US and Iran, followed by favorable financial results for the period ended June 30, 2026, will support market sentiment in the near term.

Market continues to trade at attractive valuations.

The brokerage forecast the benchmark Index to reach 263,800 by end December 2026.

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

Strategic Triumph or Political Narrative

Iran’s decision to declare victory after signing a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the Trump administration has triggered a new debate, is Tehran celebrating a genuine strategic achievement, or is it shaping a political narrative for domestic and regional audiences?

From Iran’s perspective, there are clear reasons for confidence. The agreement ends a damaging confrontation, reopens the Strait of Hormuz, removes immediate military pressure and creates the possibility of relief from restrictions on its oil and banking sectors. Most importantly, Tehran has avoided the outcome many feared, a forced political collapse or a decisive military defeat. In international politics, preserving national sovereignty under extreme pressure is often considered an achievement.

Iran can also argue that Washington’s decision to negotiate represents recognition that maximum pressure and military action alone could not achieve all American objectives. A return to diplomacy suggests that both sides eventually accepted the limits of coercion.

However, the declaration of victory may be premature. The MOU is not a final settlement but the beginning of a difficult negotiating process, particularly regarding Iran’s nuclear program and broader regional issues. The durability of Iran’s gains will depend on implementation, economic recovery and whether future disagreements lead to renewed confrontation.

The reaction inside Iran also reflects a more complex picture. Supporters of the government view the agreement as evidence of resistance and national strength. Hard-line groups, however, argue that Iran had greater leverage and should have demanded more concessions. Meanwhile, ordinary citizens appear focused less on political symbolism and more on whether the agreement improves daily economic conditions and reduces uncertainty.

The United States also faces a complicated outcome. Washington retains influence through diplomacy, sanctions mechanisms and future negotiations, but it cannot claim a complete victory when military pressure ultimately led back to the negotiating table.

The reality is that neither side achieved all of its objectives. Iran gained survival, diplomatic space and potential economic relief, while the United States achieved a pause in escalation and a framework for further negotiations.

The MOU should therefore not be viewed simply as an Iranian victory or an American defeat. It represents a temporary balance of power where both sides accepted that confrontation had limits.

History will judge this agreement not by the celebrations that followed its signing, but by whether it produces lasting stability, economic improvement and a sustainable solution to one of the world’s most dangerous geopolitical disputes.

Thursday, 18 June 2026

Trans-Afghan Railway: Turning Geography into Opportunity

For decades, discussions about Afghanistan have been dominated by conflict, instability, and missed opportunities. The proposed Trans-Afghan Railway offers a rare chance to change that narrative. More importantly, it presents an opportunity for Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Central Asia to convert geography into economic advantage.

The project aims to connect Uzbekistan with Pakistan through Afghanistan, providing Central Asian states access to the Arabian Sea via Pakistan's ports. If completed, the railway could significantly reduce transportation costs and transit times for regional trade. For landlocked Central Asian economies, access to Karachi, Port Qasim, and potentially Gwadar would diversify trade routes and reduce dependence on traditional corridors.

The economic logic behind the project is compelling. Central Asia possesses abundant natural resources and growing industrial capacity, while South Asia offers one of the world's largest consumer markets. Yet trade between the two regions remains far below its potential, largely because of inadequate transport infrastructure. The Trans-Afghan Railway could become the missing link that bridges this gap.

For Pakistan, the benefits extend beyond transit fees. Increased cargo movement would stimulate activity at ports, support logistics and warehousing industries, and strengthen the country's ambition to become a regional trade hub. At a time when Pakistan is seeking sustainable sources of economic growth, regional connectivity projects deserve greater attention.

However, enthusiasm must be tempered with realism. Financing remains a major hurdle. Construction costs are estimated in billions of dollars and could rise further due to Afghanistan's difficult terrain. Securing funding from international lenders and private investors will require strong assurances regarding security, governance, and commercial viability.

Security is perhaps the most critical challenge. Infrastructure can only succeed when investors and traders have confidence that it can operate without disruption. Political stability and constructive cooperation among the participating countries will therefore be just as important as engineering expertise.

The Trans-Afghan Railway is not merely a transportation project; it is a test of regional vision. Success would demonstrate that economic cooperation can overcome historical divisions and create shared prosperity. Failure, on the other hand, would reinforce the perception that South and Central Asia remain unable to capitalize on their strategic location.

The railway's promise is undeniable. The real challenge lies in transforming a bold vision into a functioning corridor of trade, investment, and regional integration.


Iran-US sign MOU: Pause in Conflict, Not End

With the signing of the memorandum of understanding (MOU), attention is shifting from military confrontation to political interpretation. As details emerge, supporters and critics in all three capitals—Washington, Tel Aviv, and Tehran—are attempting to define the agreement on their own terms. Such reactions are hardly surprising. In geopolitical disputes, agreements are often judged less by what they contain than by how they are perceived.

For the United States, the immediate achievement is the avoidance of a wider regional conflict. Washington can argue that a combination of military pressure and diplomacy brought Iran to the negotiating table without requiring a prolonged war. The agreement also helps contain risks to global energy supplies and international markets. However, the US administration may still face difficult questions. If Iran retains substantial strategic capabilities, critics may argue that the objectives initially articulated by Washington have only been partially achieved.

Israel can claim that its security concerns have been elevated to the center of international diplomacy. Any restrictions on Iran's military or nuclear-related activities would be viewed as a tangible gain. Yet Israeli policymakers are likely to remain cautious. Their primary concern has never been the signing of an agreement but the effectiveness of its enforcement. For Israel, verification may prove more important than the commitments themselves.

Iran, meanwhile, appears to have secured what it has long sought: relief from mounting economic and military pressure while preserving national sovereignty. Reduced sanctions pressure and improved economic prospects could provide much-needed support to the Iranian economy. At the same time, Tehran must convince domestic audiences that any commitments undertaken do not compromise its strategic independence or regional standing.

The agreement therefore creates opportunities as well as dilemmas for all three stakeholders. The United States seeks stability without appearing weak. Israel seeks security without relying solely on diplomacy. Iran seeks economic relief without sacrificing strategic autonomy.

Ultimately, the significance of the MOU will not be determined by its wording but by its durability. If implemented in good faith, it could reduce tensions in one of the world's most volatile regions. If mistrust and competing interpretations prevail, the agreement may be remembered not as a settlement, but as a temporary pause between successive crises.

Wednesday, 17 June 2026

Ceasefire Ambition and Strategic Ambiguity

The reported 14-point memorandum of understanding on ending the Iran conflict, as cited by The Hill and attributed to Bloomberg and CNN sources, presents a sweeping and highly consequential framework. Yet, rather than signalling a settled peace architecture, it raises fundamental questions about legitimacy, sequencing, and strategic intent.

According to the reported text, the United States and Israel initiated military action while negotiations were still ongoing, without prior consultation of the United Nations Security Council or clear congressional authorization. This sequencing alone casts doubt on the institutional grounding of the process, especially when such a far-reaching agreement is now expected to carry binding implications.

The proposed structure appears heavily front-loaded with political assurances but back-loaded with enforceable obligations. A key example is the creation of a US$300 billion reconstruction fund for Iran, reportedly to be financed by the United States “together with its regional partners.” This raises a critical equity question: why should regional actors shoulder reconstruction costs while the responsibility for conflict escalation remains contested?

Equally contentious is the ambiguity surrounding sanctions. While the draft suggests a commitment to lifting “all types of sanctions,” it simultaneously defers implementation to a final agreement, leaving Iran’s economic reintegration uncertain and conditional. The immediate easing of oil export restrictions and unfreezing of Iranian assets further complicates the sequencing, effectively front-loading economic relief before verifiable political concessions.

On the nuclear dimension, the agreement reportedly reiterates Iran’s commitment not to develop nuclear weapons, while maintaining the “status quo” of its enrichment program. However, without explicit, time-bound constraints or robust verification mechanisms involving neutral actors, such as additional oversight by the United Nations Security Council, the arrangement risks replicating past cycles of mistrust.

President Trump’s assertion that the memorandum is “not final” and his warning of renewed bombing if Iran does not “behave” further underscore the fragility of the arrangement. Diplomacy framed by conditional coercion may secure short-term de-escalation, but it leaves long-term stability unresolved.

Ultimately, the reported MOU reflects less a conclusive peace settlement and more an evolving geopolitical bargaining framework—one that demands closer scrutiny of sequencing, burden-sharing, and institutional legitimacy before it can credibly translate into lasting regional stability.

Tuesday, 16 June 2026

Safe Departure of Stranded Crew

Both the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) and the International Maritime Organization (IMO) welcomed news of the US-Iran peace deal and the expected re-opening of the Strait of Hormuz.

The closure of the key waterway to all but a trickle of traffic since February 28, has left around 1,000 ships and 20,000 crew stranded in the Arabian Gulf.

“This announcement comes as a relief to the 20,000 seafarers who have been caught in the middle of this war. Their safe departure from the region must be a top priority but will take time,” said ICS Secretary General Thomas Kazakos.

The ICS is looking to the IMO to help facilitate this process. “With around 500 ships needing to pass through the Strait to exit the area this will require coordination.  The International Maritime Organization has a crucial role, working alongside industry and states in the region, to ensure this is done as safely and as quickly as possible,” Kazakos said.

In a separate statement IMO Secretary-General Arsenio Dominguez, said, “The agreement also allows IMO to advance its plan to evacuate the thousands of seafarers stranded in the area. The Organization is working in close collaboration with Member States and partners to implement this plan safely and effectively. However, its implementation will require time to ensure that all necessary safety and security guarantees are in place.”

Details of the re-opening of the Strait and when it will happen remain unclear although it is expected after the signing of the peace deal between US and Iran on 19 June.

Both ICS and IMO stressed the need for a return to freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz and paid tribute to innocent seafarers who lost their lives in the conflict.

“This signals a crucial return to peace, dialogue, multilateralism and diplomacy, and in particular, an important step toward restoring safety in this vital maritime corridor for seafarers and ships, as well as safeguarding the fundamental principle of freedom of navigation,” IMO said.

Kazakos from ICS stated, “The fundamental principle of freedom of navigation has been sidelined during the war, and many seafarers have regrettably been injured or lost their lives. As we now hopefully move towards peace, we must see a permanent return to vessels being able to pass through the Strait of Hormuz unimpeded without paying a toll or other clearance mechanism.” 

IMO Secretary-General Dominguez has repeatedly highlighted the plight of seafarers caught in the conflict and the unacceptable targeting of commercial shipping. The IMO said the Secretary-General expressed his deepest sympathies for all victims of the conflict, and paid particular tribute to the innocent seafarers affected and to their families. 

Courtesy: Seatrade Maritime News

 

Monday, 15 June 2026

Growing Credibility Gap in US Foreign Policy

The conflicting statements emerging from Washington regarding a possible agreement with Iran have generated more confusion than confidence. President Donald Trump appears to alter his position with remarkable frequency, while sections of the Western media continue to interpret every statement as evidence of an imminent breakthrough. Yet the fundamental reality remains unchanged - any sustainable agreement with Iran cannot be imposed solely on American terms.

For decades, the United States has relied on a combination of sanctions, diplomatic pressure, and military leverage to influence Iranian behavior. However, recent developments suggest that these tools have yielded diminishing returns. Despite facing severe economic restrictions and international isolation efforts, Iran has demonstrated resilience and retained its ability to influence regional dynamics. Whether the West acknowledges it or not, Tehran today remains a significant geopolitical actor whose interests cannot simply be ignored.

This reality has exposed a growing credibility gap in US foreign policy. Repeated shifts in messaging have made it increasingly difficult for allies and adversaries alike to distinguish between strategic objectives and political rhetoric. When policy signals change rapidly, uncertainty becomes the dominant feature of international relations.

The consequences extend beyond the Iran question. Energy markets remain vulnerable to geopolitical tensions, yet major oil-exporting countries appear unable to persuade Washington to adopt policies that would facilitate smoother and more predictable crude oil flows. The result has been prolonged uncertainty for both producers and consumers.

At the same time, Washington's broader strategic objectives appear increasingly difficult to reconcile. The United States has sought to contain Iran, restrict China's access to reliable energy supplies, reassure its allies, and maintain pressure on geopolitical competitors—all while preserving stability in global markets. Such ambitions may be understandable, but pursuing multiple objectives simultaneously often produces unintended consequences.

Questions are also being raised about the effectiveness of traditional Western alliances. America's partners continue to depend on Washington's leadership, yet many are increasingly concerned about policy unpredictability and the absence of a coherent long-term strategy. This uncertainty has encouraged countries across Asia, the Middle East, and elsewhere to diversify their diplomatic and economic partnerships.

Perhaps the most striking outcome is visible in global energy markets. Despite recurring geopolitical crises and heightened tensions, crude oil prices have struggled to sustain significant gains. This suggests that markets are increasingly influenced by structural economic factors rather than political narratives alone.

The lesson is straightforward. Credibility remains one of the most valuable assets in international diplomacy. Military strength and economic power matter, but they are most effective when supported by consistency and strategic clarity. As long as Washington continues to send mixed signals on critical issues such as Iran, the credibility gap in US foreign policy is likely to widen, with consequences extending far beyond the Middle East.