Friday, 17 April 2026

PSX benchmark index up 4.0%WoW

Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) remained positive during this past week ended on Friday April 17, 2026, supported by easing geopolitical tensions and softer oil prices. The benchmark Index surged by 6,748 points or 4.0%WoW to close at 173,939. Average daily trading increased to 1,264 million shares, from 918 million shares during the earlier week, up 37.6%WoW.

One of the key boosters of investors’ sentiments was an inflow of US$2.0 billion from Saudi Arabia, with an aggregate committed support of US$8.0 billion, including a rollover of US$5.0 billion.

Sentiments improved following the Prime Minister’s announcement of reduction in prices of motor spirit and high speed diesel.

Confidence was further supported by Pakistan’s role in in ceasefire in a US-Iran war on optimism around a second round of talks to take place in Islamabad.

Fertilizer and Autos remained in focus. Urea offtake increased by 86%YoY to 569,000 tons in March 2026, while DAP, CAN, and NP sales also surged.

Auto sales rose to 19,100 units in March 2026, up 46%YoY, primarily driven by strong tractor sales.

Pakistan posted a current account surplus of US$1.07 billion in March 2026, marking the third consecutive surplus.

Another important feature was reduction in T-Bills yield.

UBL’s higher than expected earnings for the first quarter supported the momentum.

Leather & Tanneries, Textile Weaving, and Vanaspati & Allied Industries emerged as top performing sectors, while, Woollen and Tobacco were the laggards.

Major buying was recorded by Individuals and Companies with a net buy of US$10.7 million and US$10.5 million. Banks and Insurance companies emerged as major seller with a net sell of US$22.1 million and US$9.6 million respectively.

Top performing scrips of the week were: GAL, GHNI, LOTCHEM, BOP, and SRVI, while laggards included: PTC, FATIMA, ATRL, MEBL, and BNWM.

 According to AKD Securities, going forward, upcoming negotiations in Islamabad on US-Iran war would remain a key focus for investors. Any positive development would likely keep the market robust.

Despite the recent recovery, market continues to trade at attractive valuations.

According to the brokerage house the benchmark index is expected to reach 263,800.

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

Chinese Deployment in South China Sea

According to media reports, China has deployed vessels and installed floating barriers at the entrance to the South China Sea, where it is engaged in a maritime territorial dispute with the Philippines. This move comes as the United States, which is at war with Iran, has positioned three aircraft carriers in the Middle East and withdrawn military assets and personnel from the Indo-Pacific region. In the past, when US carriers left the area, Beijing often tested the level of external pressure against it through various channels.

According to reports vessels presumed to be Chinese Navy or Coast Guard patrol ships, fishing boats, and floating barriers crossing the reef were detected near the Scarborough Shoal lately. The Scarborough Shoal is one of the most fiercely contested maritime territories in the Indo-Pacific, where Chinese Coast Guard ships frequently ram and spray water cannons at Philippine maritime patrol vessels.

In 2023, China had installed floating barriers in the waters around the Scarborough Shoal to block Philippine fishing boats, leading to a conflict when Philippine Coast Guard divers were dispatched to remove them.

China claims sovereignty over most of the South China Sea under its self-defined "nine-dash line," but the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) ruled in 2016 that this claim has no basis under international law. Despite this, Beijing has continued to dispatch patrol ships to the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone (EEZ), prolonging the dispute.

The US has pressured China since 2015 by conducting "Freedom of Navigation" operations in the South China Sea. Allies and partner nations advocating for a "Free and Open Indo-Pacific" (FOIP) have also participated in these exercises. However, a significant portion of US naval forces is currently deployed near Iran and the Strait of Hormuz.

The Washington Post has reported last month that the USS George H.W. Bush, which departed from the Norfolk base in Virginia, is expected to arrive in the Middle East around the April 21, 2026. This marks the third aircraft carrier to be deployed to the region, following the USS Abraham Lincoln, previously stationed in the South China Sea, and the USS Gerald R. Ford, which was deployed in the Caribbean Sea.

Additionally, part of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system, a key component in South Korea’s defense against North Korean nuclear and missile threats, has been withdrawn, and the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, typically the first to respond to contingencies on the Korean Peninsula, has been redeployed from Japan to the Middle East.

 

Thursday, 16 April 2026

Washington’s Strategic Ambiguity

The ongoing confrontation between the United States and Iran has raised a fundamental question: what justifies a war that reportedly consumes over a billion dollars a day while its objectives remain unclear? From the outset, the rationale has been fluid. Concerns over Iran’s nuclear ambitions, the need to degrade its missile capabilities, and broader ambitions of strategic dominance were all cited. Yet, none evolved into a clearly defined end-state. As the conflict progressed, these shifting justifications exposed a deeper problem—not just of policy, but of purpose.

Wars, particularly those financed by taxpayers, demand clarity. They require defined goals, measurable outcomes, and a realistic timeline. In this case, none appear firmly in place. Instead, what has emerged resembles a pattern seen in past conflicts: initial confidence giving way to strategic drift. The absence of a publicly articulated exit strategy suggests that the war was not designed with an end, but rather escalated in response to unfolding events.

Equally troubling is the economic dimension. At a time when millions within the United States face challenges in healthcare, education, and infrastructure, the allocation of vast financial resources to an open-ended conflict raises serious ethical and economic concerns. Public funds—collected with the promise of improving citizens’ lives—are being redirected into a war whose tangible benefits remain difficult to quantify.

The disruption of global oil flows and the broader economic fallout have further complicated the equation. If the objective was stability, the outcome appears to be the opposite. If it was deterrence, the persistence of tensions suggests limited success. In purely economic terms, the cost-benefit balance appears heavily skewed toward cost.

This is not merely a question of foreign policy; it is a question of accountability. Democracies derive legitimacy from the consent of their citizens, and that consent is strained when public resources are committed without transparent justification.

A ceasefire may pause the fighting, but it does not answer the central question: what was achieved, and at what cost? Until that question is convincingly addressed, this war risks being remembered not for its outcomes, but for its ambiguity—and for the taxpayers who ultimately paid the price.

Who Drives Washington’s War Decisions?

The decision by the United States Senate to reject resolutions aimed at halting arms sales to Israel has once again exposed the ever-present crisis in American policymaking - the gap between formal representation and the deeper forces that shape outcomes.

Elected officials in the United States are, without question, representatives of their citizens. Yet, modern governance operates within a dense web of lobbying, campaign financing, and strategic alliances that complicate this relationship.

To suggest that lawmakers are directly controlled by any foreign state would be an overreach. However, it is equally difficult to ignore the institutional weight of pro-Israel lobbying, long-standing security cooperation, and the domestic political incentives that reinforce this alignment.

Beyond this specific case lies a broader structural reality. Washington’s policy environment is influenced by a convergence of powerful sectors whose interests often align with sustained geopolitical tension.

The military-industrial complex—first cautioned against by Dwight D. Eisenhower—continues to benefit from robust defense spending and arms exports.

Energy companies operate in markets where instability can tighten supply dynamics and elevate prices.

Major media platforms, while diverse, play a critical role in framing conflicts and shaping public sentiment.

Meanwhile, financial institutions centered around Wall Street respond to—and often capitalize on—volatility and capital shifts triggered by global crises.

This is not a story of conspiracy, but of incentives. These sectors do not uniformly seek conflict; rather, they are positioned to benefit when instability arises. Policymakers, functioning within this ecosystem, may not act at the behest of these actors, but their decisions are rarely insulated from such pressures.

Crucially, US support for Israel is also anchored in strategic and ideological considerations—shared security objectives, regional calculations, and a deeply embedded bipartisan consensus. Ignoring this dimension oversimplifies a complex policy posture.

The Senate’s vote, therefore, reflects more than a single policy choice. It underscores how democratic representation coexists with layered influences—economic, strategic, and political.

The real question is not whether American lawmakers represent their people, but whether the system ensures that public interest remains the dominant force amid competing pressures.

Wednesday, 15 April 2026

American LNG Exporters Biggest Winner

The ongoing US-Israel war on Iran is reshaping more than regional geopolitics—it is quietly redrawing global energy markets. At the center of this shift are US liquefied natural gas (LNG) exporters, emerging as the biggest beneficiaries of the crisis.

The Strait of Hormuz, a vital artery for global energy flows, remains under severe strain amid heightened tensions and a US naval blockade on Iranian ports. At the same time, Qatar—responsible for nearly a fifth of global LNG supply—has seen its export capacity hit by attacks. Repairs could take months, while full restoration may take years.

This twin disruption has created a global gas shortage. With Qatar largely sidelined, buyers in Asia and Europe are scrambling for alternatives. The United States, already the world’s largest LNG exporter, has stepped in to fill the gap.

American LNG producers are capitalizing on a rare pricing advantage. Natural gas sourced domestically at around US$3/ MMBtu is being sold internationally at prices close to US$20/ MMBtu. Such margins are generating extraordinary cash flows, strengthening balance sheets, and accelerating expansion plans.

The market response has been swift. American LNG companies are raising financing, expanding export terminals, and recording gains in stock valuations. With capacity expected to grow significantly over the next five years, the current crisis is not just a short-term windfall—it is reinforcing America’s long-term position in global energy markets.

Yet, there are limits to this advantage. Persistently high LNG prices risk pushing developing economies toward cheaper alternatives such as coal or renewables. Countries like Pakistan have already reduced LNG imports in favor of solar and battery solutions, a trend that could widen if prices remain elevated.

The conclusion is clear. The disruption of Gulf energy supplies has created a vacuum—and American LNG exporters are filling it with remarkable speed and profitability. In a conflict defined by uncertainty, America’s LNG industry stands out as a decisive economic winner.

Tuesday, 14 April 2026

China slams US blockade of Iranian ports

China has slammed the US blockade of Iranian ports as dangerous and irresponsible, calling for an immediate and full ceasefire and for the Strait of Hormuz to be reopened.

Foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun told reporters at a daily briefing in Beijing on Tuesday that the US action would only “inflame tensions, escalate the situation and undermine an already fragile ceasefire”, and that would further jeopardize the safety of navigation in the strait.

“We urge all parties to abide by the ceasefire arrangement, focus on the broader direction of dialogue and negotiations, take concrete actions to de-escalate the regional situation and restore normal navigation in the strait at an early date,” Guo said.

He added that the situation in the region was “at a critical stage” and said China would continue to work with the international community to promote peace talks and to strive for peace and stability in the Middle East.

The US began a naval blockade of Iranian ports on Monday after its marathon peace talks with Iran in Pakistan to reopen the Strait of Hormuz failed over the weekend.

The US Central Command on Monday issued a formal notice to seafarers outlining enforcement measures in waters around the strait, saying that not all maritime traffic would be halted. The blockade “will not impede neutral transit passage through the Strait of Hormuz to or from non-Iranian destinations”, it said.

Iran has warned of retaliation, vowing that “no port in the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman will be safe”.

 

Emerging Cracks in US-Qatar Relations

The relationship between Qatar and the United States has long rested on a strategic bargain—energy security for military protection. Yet recent developments, even if contested, are beginning to test this understanding.

Speculation surrounding missile strikes that allegedly disrupted part of Qatar’s LNG capacity has created unease in Doha. While the scale and attribution remain unclear, the psychological impact is significant. For a country hosting Al Udeid Air Base, the largest American military installation in the region, security assurances are not optional—they are central.

What appears to have unsettled Qatari policymakers is less the incident itself and more the perceived absence of response. In a region where deterrence depends on visibility, the lack of any clear interception effort raises difficult questions about capability and intent.

The complexity deepens with Iran denying responsibility. This has fueled alternative narratives, including speculation of covert involvement by Israel. While unverified, such claims reflect a broader erosion of clarity in regional conflicts.

For Qatar, the implications are serious. As a leading LNG exporter, even perceived vulnerability can disrupt market confidence and long-term planning. More critically, it prompts a reassessment of its security dependence.

For the United States, the stakes extend beyond Qatar. Its regional credibility hinges on the confidence of its allies. If partners begin to question its willingness or ability to defend critical assets, Washington’s broader Middle East posture could weaken.

This is not a rupture—but it may signal recalibration. Qatar could quietly diversify its security options while strengthening its own defenses. The United States, in turn, may need to reinforce not just its presence, but its reliability.

In geopolitics, perception often shapes reality. The cracks may not yet be visible—but they are no longer dismissible.