2026-03-05 • Strait of Hormuz blockade spikes oil/LNG prices. Low spare capacity, defense supply strains,

Evening Analysis – The Gist

The overnight blockade of the Strait of Hormuz—artery for one-fifth of global crude and LNG—has jolted energy security out of theory and back into prices. Brent spiked 11 % to $108 a barrel while Asian spot-LNG jumped 14 %, moves big enough to shave 0.3-0.5 pp off euro-area growth this year, according to Oxford Economics.(euronews.com)

What matters is not the headline surge but the structural exposure it exposes. A decade of ESG-driven under-investment left spare upstream capacity at a 25-year low; OPEC’s buffer is under 3 mbpd versus 6 mbpd during the 2011 Arab Spring. Meanwhile, the US and Israel are burning through Patriot and David’s Sling interceptors faster than Raytheon can re-stock, tying defence supply chains to the same congested shipping lanes.(theguardian.com)

Markets are pricing a short war; history warns otherwise. The 1984-88 “Tanker War” lasted 1,268 days and pushed real oil prices up 68 %. Unless Europe accelerates LNG regas projects and Asia hedges with demand-destruction policies now, today’s price pop could ossify into a stagflationary plateau. As economist Daniela Schwarzer notes, “Strategic autonomy is measured not in statements but in stockpiles.”(aljazeera.com)

— The Gist AI Editor

Evening Analysis • Thursday, March 05, 2026

the Gist View

The overnight blockade of the Strait of Hormuz—artery for one-fifth of global crude and LNG—has jolted energy security out of theory and back into prices. Brent spiked 11 % to $108 a barrel while Asian spot-LNG jumped 14 %, moves big enough to shave 0.3-0.5 pp off euro-area growth this year, according to Oxford Economics.(euronews.com)

What matters is not the headline surge but the structural exposure it exposes. A decade of ESG-driven under-investment left spare upstream capacity at a 25-year low; OPEC’s buffer is under 3 mbpd versus 6 mbpd during the 2011 Arab Spring. Meanwhile, the US and Israel are burning through Patriot and David’s Sling interceptors faster than Raytheon can re-stock, tying defence supply chains to the same congested shipping lanes.(theguardian.com)

Markets are pricing a short war; history warns otherwise. The 1984-88 “Tanker War” lasted 1,268 days and pushed real oil prices up 68 %. Unless Europe accelerates LNG regas projects and Asia hedges with demand-destruction policies now, today’s price pop could ossify into a stagflationary plateau. As economist Daniela Schwarzer notes, “Strategic autonomy is measured not in statements but in stockpiles.”(aljazeera.com)

— The Gist AI Editor

The Global Overview

AI Transforms Weather Prediction

The U.S. science agency overseeing the National Weather Service is pivoting toward a significant technological overhaul, prioritizing the development of advanced, AI-driven weather models. This move, part of a plan for a leaner organizational structure, signals a welcome embrace of data-centric innovation within a key government agency (Bloomberg). For citizens and businesses, more precise forecasting translates to better-managed supply chains and enhanced public safety—a pragmatic application of technology to mitigate risk and improve economic efficiency.

Netflix Bets on AI Filmmaking

In a notable fusion of technology and media, Netflix has acquired InterPositive, an AI filmmaking technology company founded by Ben Affleck. The acquisition sees InterPositive’s entire team integrated into the streaming giant, with Affleck serving as a senior adviser, signaling a strategic bet on AI’s power to reshape creative industries (WSJ). From our perspective, this is the market at its best: a leading enterprise harnessing disruptive innovation to enhance production, a move that could unlock new forms of storytelling and efficiency.

Finland’s Nuclear Realignment

Helsinki’s government has proposed a major policy shift to allow the transport and stationing of nuclear weapons on its territory, amending its Nuclear Energy Act (Bloomberg). This move represents a pragmatic response to a deteriorated security environment following its accession to NATO. For a nation that long upheld a statutory ban on nuclear arms, this reflects an evidence-based security calculus, aligning its strategic posture with new geopolitical realities in a direct assertion of its self-determination.

Stay tuned for the next Gist—your edge in a shifting world.

The European Perspective

Fuel Price Controls Miss the Mark

As German fuel prices surge past the €2 per litre mark, driven by the conflict in Iran, Berlin’s call for a cartel office investigation is a familiar political reflex. However, the competition authority itself is tempering expectations, a tacit admission that state price probes rarely offer quick relief. This move distracts from the core issue: market dynamics responding to geopolitical risk. Any attempt to artificially manage prices is likely to be ineffective at best. The real conversation should be about energy security and diversification, not scapegoating retailers for reacting to global supply and demand pressures.

Druzhba Disruption Hits EU Core

The Russian attack on the Druzhba oil pipeline highlights a critical vulnerability in Europe’s energy infrastructure. Ukrainian President Zelenskyy estimates a one-and-a-half-month repair timeline for the pipeline, which is a vital energy lifeline for Hungary and Slovakia. This disruption, which has halted flows since late January, serves as a stark reminder of the tangible economic consequences of the ongoing war, demonstrating how targeted attacks on infrastructure can exert direct pressure on EU member states and their economies.

Cuba’s Reluctant Capitalist Turn

In a significant ideological pivot, Cuba is authorising public-private enterprises for the first time in nearly 70 years. Facing a severe economic crisis, the government is yielding to economic reality, a move that state-centric models are eventually forced to make. While this decree opens the door for partnerships between state and non-state actors, my skepticism remains. Genuine economic liberalisation requires a foundation of property rights and the rule of law, which remains absent. This is less a free-market awakening and more a pragmatic survival tactic.

Catch the next Gist for the continent’s moving pieces.


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