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Geoeconomic Monitor: After Beijing

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Geoeconomic Monitor: After Beijing

Tom Holland, Tom Miller
15 May 2026
If Donald Trump traveled to Beijing hoping to enlist Xi Jinping’s support in bringing the US war against Iran to a successful conclusion, he will return to Washington disappointed. The deadlock in the Persian Gulf remains in place, with the two sides miles apart and neither inclined to make major concessions. Tom Holland looks at what could break the current stalemate. Meanwhile, Tom Miller updates on US moves to approve the use of new Section 301 tariffs, and examines how the US could deploy them.
Hong Kong Rides Again

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Hong Kong Rides Again

Rohan Daswani, Udith Sikand
15 May 2026
Investors are holding their breath as they wait to see how the summit between presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping in Beijing reshapes the global investment landscape. But one key weather vane is already pointing to a turn in the cycle. Hong Kong’s property market, highly sensitive to global interest rates and liquidity conditions, is signaling a more favorable turn for sentiment and capital flows across Asia.

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China’s Supporting Role In The AI Boom

Thomas Gatley
15 May 2026
China’s exports are getting a new boost from the accelerating artificial-intelligence spending boom, in particular for the unsexy but necessary parts and components that go into building data centers. But Thomas argues that what makes this latest surge of exports different is that it is not adding to the trade surplus: China’s import bill for AI-related goods is rising at the same pace as its export receipts.

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The Chinese Equity Bull Market Quandary

Louis-Vincent Gave
14 May 2026
Chinese equities have performed creditably over the last two years, but Louis says they may just be getting going. In this deep dive on the Chinese market, he considers the outlook at the macro and sectoral level. Momentum investors, he says, can focus on AI, tech hardware, industrials and materials. Carry investors can look to high-dividend-yielding stocks and banks. Meanwhile, mean-reversion investors may find value in internet names, real estate stocks and consumer names.

Gavekal Dragonomics

Macro Update: Grappling With External Uncertainties
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Wei He, Dragonomics Team
Foreign EV Makers Fight Back
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Ernan Cui
False Hope For Infrastructure Investment
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Wei He
Shanghai’s Stealth Mortgage-Rate Cut
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Xiaoxi Zhang
Why Corporate Margins Will Take A Hit
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Thomas Gatley

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Warsh, Inflation And US Bonds
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Will Denyer
Video: Modi Calls For Sacrifice
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Udith Sikand
Stable Financial Systems Versus Unstable Financial Systems
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Charles Gave
An Orderly Stagflation—So Far
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Cedric Gemehl, August Gudmundsson
A Regime Change In Motion
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Louis-Vincent Gave, Leonid Mironov

Gavekal Technologies

Corporate America’s Beijing Shopping List
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Laila Khawaja
Triumphant Technology, Murderous Market
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Tom Hancock, Ernan Cui, AJ Cortese, Leonid Mironov
Arming Up For The Trump-Xi Summit
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Laila Khawaja
A Western Hemisphere Strategy For Rare Earths
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Damien Ma, Tom Hancock, Laila Khawaja
China Blocks Meta-Manus Deal
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Laila Khawaja

Gavekal-IS

Economic Regime Shift
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Didier Darcet
Chinese Impressions
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Didier Darcet
Understanding Asset Price Trajectories (Part II)
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Didier Darcet
Understanding Asset Price Trajectories (Part I)
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Didier Darcet
The Neutral Portfolio
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Didier Darcet

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Rolling Over The Iran Ceasefire

Louis-Vincent Gave
23 Apr 2026
The next round of the Islamabad peace talks is up in the air, partly because it is not obvious who really holds the levers of power in Iran. The plan was that, should Iran’s political leaders be killed, the 31 regional commanders would become independent actors whose task was simply to take the fight to the enemy. Louis argues this leaves investors with three main possible scenarios.

Checking The Boxes

Our short take on the latest news

Fact
Surprise
Takeaway

US retail sales in nominal terms rose 0.5% MoM in Apr, versus 1.6% in Mar

As expected; retail sales ex-autos & gas rose 0.5% MoM in Apr, versus 0.7% in Mar

Despite energy shock, wealth effects continue to prop up consumer spending 

UK GDP rose 0.6% QoQ in 1Q26, versus 0.2% in 4Q25

As expected; YoY, GDP rose 1.1% in 1Q26, versus 1% in 4Q25

Boosted by seasonal effects; leading indicators point to slowdown ahead

China aggregate financing year-to-date at RMB15.5trn in Apr, versus RMB148trn in Mar

Below expected RMB16.1trn

Despite continued weakness in credit demand, no sign of imminent policy support

Japan PPI rose 4.9% YoY in Apr, versus 2.9% in Mar

Above expected 3%

Driven by energy; fiscal subsidies will temper pass-through to consumer inflation

Test Your Knowledge
MSCI has decided to kick out six Indonesian stocks from the country’s indexes at the end of May, following concerns around concentrated ownership. How much of the MSCI Indonesia index do they account for?
  1. 5%
  2. 11%
  3. 17%
  4. 30%
Post Your Answer

Chart of the Week

Week 18, 2026
The accumulation of large US dollar balances by oil producers has long been the lynchpin of the petrodollar thesis to explain the US dollar’s dominance. What is less appreciated is that the current account surpluses of Northeast Asian economies have generally exceeded the surpluses of Gulf Cooperation Council economies.
Open Chart

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Essential Reading: A Book For Every Week Of The Year

Gavekal is often asked for a recommended reading list. So, here it is: a book a week that everyone interested in the world of macro investing—whether hoary veteran or eager apprentice—can benefit from reading.

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Webinar: Is Trump Making Europe Great Again?

Anatole Kaletsky, Cedric Gemehl, August Gudmundsson, Simon Pritchard
8 May 2026
US economic actions, on the face of it, threaten Europe’s strategic and economic wellbeing. The continent’s export industries have been roiled by the US president’s trade war, while the attack on Iran risks an inflationary surge as energy prices climb. At the same time, Donald Trump appears to be stepping back from the Atlantic alliance and has reduced support for Ukraine. Our panel addresses whether this new reality signals a death knell for the European integration project, or whether it is the catalyst Europe needs to rethink both its economic and strategic models.

The Iran War And Fallout

An Orderly Stagflation—So Far
Recent data releases confirm that the eurozone is heading into a near-term future of slower growth and faster inflation as the economy feels the effects of higher energy prices triggered by the Iran war. But so far, the impact has been absorbed relatively smoothly. This suggests the eurozone economy is adjusting in an orderly fashion, and is not falling into a full-blown crisis.
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A Stress Test, Not A Collapse
It is now 10 weeks since the Iran war led to the suspension of almost all energy trade through the Strait of Hormuz. While the physical oil market has exhibited stress, futures market pricing continues to imply a full resumption of Middle Eastern exports in the next three months. In this paper, Leonid Mironov examines the state of the oil market’s buffers against a continued supply shock—the state of inventories and possible workarounds to bypass Hormuz—to assess where the market is working, and where it is mispricing risk.
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Asian Damage Control
Almost 10 weeks after ships stopped sailing through the Strait of Hormuz, the pain in Asia from the disruption to fuel and feedstock supplies is finally showing up in the macro data. The question for investors is whether rising economic pain triggers a bout of contagion selling and a financial shock across the region, as during the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997. Udith and Tom argue that there are two major reasons to think Asia will avoid a full-blown financial crisis.
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Energy Versus Semiconductors
In April, the MSCI World semiconductor index rose 27%. Over the same period, the MSCI World energy index fell -2.1%. In its collective wisdom, the market seems to be telling investors not to worry about the near-term possibility of an Iran-war-induced energy crisis, but instead to worry that the rollout of artificial intelligence solutions will trigger semiconductor shortages on a grand scale. The performance of the market now raises a question: what could energy bulls be missing?
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US economy & markets

Warsh, Inflation And US Bonds
On Wednesday the US Senate confirmed Kevin Warsh to succeed Jerome Powell as chair of the Federal Reserve this Friday. Warsh will get no honeymoon period. After high US inflation prints, in intraday trading Wednesday, 10-year US treasury yields touched 4.5% for the first time since June 2025. And at almost 2.5%, the breakeven inflation rate on 10-year treasuries is close to its high for the last three years. Will breakeven inflation rates break higher from here? If so, how will the Fed and its new leader respond? What will this mean for US bond yields?
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Funding For AI
The boom in US artificial intelligence-related profits and investment continues to gather momentum. Yet beneath the optimism, concerns are emerging over how this investment surge is being funded. However, Kai Xian remains optimistic and looks at the factors supporting the expansion.
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Navigating The AI Bubble: An Update
The artificial intelligence capital spending boom rages on, as evidenced by strong earnings releases and even stronger equity rallies from AI-related companies in the US and globally. With no clear signs of fatigue, the more relevant question is how durable this cycle is, what shape its key drivers are in and what could derail it.
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The Fed’s New Chair And Shadow Chair
The key outcome of this week’s Federal Reserve policy meeting was not any change to policy, it was Jerome Powell’s decision to remain on the central bank’s board of governors after his term as chair ends on May 15. This raises the prospect that Powell could serve, if need be, as a “shadow chair”. It also reduces the tail risks of the Fed losing its monetary policy independence and shifting its goals toward persistently higher inflation.
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China chartbook

Gavekal Dragonomics

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Macro Update: Grappling With External Uncertainties

Wei He, Dragonomics Team
7 May 2026
China’s economic growth was solid in the first quarter, and policymakers announced plans to dial back fiscal stimulus. But domestic demand remains sluggish, and both the Iran war and global AI spending boom have created new uncertainties around the economic trajectory. In their latest quarterly chartbook, Wei and the Dragonomics team take stock of China’s economic performance and the outlook for the coming months.

India chartbook

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India Macro Update: Downside Risks Abound

Udith Sikand, Tom Miller
23 Sep 2025
India’s domestic economic recovery is at risk as Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government faces a lose-lose choice: continue to import cheap oil from its long-time ally Russia or face punitive tariffs in its biggest export market. Last week’s US interest rate cut will give the central bank more room to cut rates, but the underperformance of Indian asset prices looks set to continue.

Latest video

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Video: Modi Calls For Sacrifice

Udith Sikand
13 May 2026
In a bid to curb precious metals purchases and defend the currency, India has more than doubled import tariffs on gold and silver. The move follows calls from Prime Minister Narendra Modi for Indians to tighten their belts as the country reels from a soaring energy import bill following the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Udith explains how mounting stresses in the currency market could ripple through Indian politics and asset markets.

Strategy Chartbook

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Quarterly Strategy Review: 1Q26

Louis-Vincent Gave
7 Apr 2026
For investors, the first quarter of 2026 was dominated by the US and Israeli attack on Iran and the resulting spike in global energy prices. But there were plenty of other developments that also affected portfolio construction, including the shakeout in US private credit,the assertion of the US “Donroe doctrine,” the Japanese election victory of Sanae Takaichi, and the appreciation of the renminbi. In this quarterly review, Louis looks at how these and other events affected market performance, and examines the factors shaping asset allocation decisions over the rest of 2026.

Emerging markets

Video: Are EMs Back?
It’s been a good quarter for the broad emerging markets complex. The MSCI EM index has returned almost 7% in US dollar terms, while US equities are down by some -3.5%. So should investors jump on the EM train? Udith points out that there is a wide divergence in the performance of individual emerging markets, and the threat of tariffs hangs heavy over EM corporate earnings. Investors need to be selective.
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Video: Southeast Asia Under Trump 2.0
Global investors are rightly focused on the potential losers from the United States pursuing an aggressively protectionist trade policy agenda, but there may be winners as well. Tom went in search of such economies last week. Today he explains how such “swing states” are likely to perform in an intensified period of great power rivalry between the US and China.
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China Turbocharges EM Investment
As the rich world pulls up the protectionist drawbridge, investors risk missing a bigger story in emerging markets. Here, Chinese outbound investment is rebounding after the fallow Covid years, and is driving a new wave of industrialization that promises to lower the cost of the green-energy transition.
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Why This Time Has Been Different
During past episodes of risk-off volatility, the correlation between emerging market risk assets has shot up. But early August’s bout of market volatility saw a bifurcation in EMs, and no broader macroeconomic spillover effects—which speaks well of the growing maturity of emerging markets as an asset class.
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Europe's economy

An Orderly Stagflation—So Far
Recent data releases confirm that the eurozone is heading into a near-term future of slower growth and faster inflation as the economy feels the effects of higher energy prices triggered by the Iran war. But so far, the impact has been absorbed relatively smoothly. This suggests the eurozone economy is adjusting in an orderly fashion, and is not falling into a full-blown crisis.
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Starmer’s Ruin Is Bullish For UK Assets
Conventional opinion in Britain has it that a defenestration of Keir Starmer will spur a lurch to the left and the embrace of tax and spend policies that hurt the outlook for UK assets. Anatole disagrees with this stance and says that Britain may now offer an interesting contrarian opportunity for equity, currency and possibly even bond investors.
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Food For The ECB Hawks
The European Central Bank held interest rates steady on Thursday, but said that risks to inflation and growth stemming from the Iran war had “intensified”. As energy prices continue to grind higher, the policy bias is being tilted toward higher rates. The near-term inflationary impulse stems almost entirely from energy effects, argues August.
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What Iran Changes For Europe
The impact of the Iran war on Europe is difficult to pin down, given the high degree of geopolitical uncertainty. A useful way to frame the outlook, argues Cedric, is by time horizon. This lens offers clarity at both ends of the horizon, while uncertainty is concentrated in the medium term.
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Equities

The Chinese Equity Bull Market Quandary
Starmer’s Ruin Is Bullish For UK Assets
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Valuing Value
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Video Killed The Radio Star
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Winners And Losers Of The Iran War
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More Resilient Than You Think
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Fixed income

Warsh, Inflation And US Bonds
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Stable Financial Systems Versus Unstable Financial Systems
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Monetizing US Budget Deficits
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The Eurozone Duration Question
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What Value In US Bonds?
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Winners And Losers Of The Iran War
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From the archives: oldies but goodies

Deficit Deniers Of The World Unite
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Deficit Deniers Of The World Unite

Anatole Kaletsky
In our politically correct age the pressure to bow down before certain popularly accepted and apparently proven “truths” can be overwhelming. In the aftermath of the US elections, two such nostrums are unnecessarily vexing investors—the urgency of deficit reduction and fear of higher taxes. I believe that both of these obsessions will soon be forgotten.
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Are We Entering into Revolutionary Times?
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Are We Entering into Revolutionary Times?

Louis-Vincent Gave
The role of a society’s elite is to rise to the challenges of the times, and find solutions fitting to those times, even if this involves a radical break with the past. But the modus operandi for most leaders is to try and maintain the status quo. But if the problems are large enough, this does not work, and the same challenges reappear until either a solution is found, the elite is replaced by a new elite, or the country, system or civilization disappears.
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The High Cost Of Free Money
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The High Cost Of Free Money

Charles Gave
Perhaps the most famous economic law is the one that there is no such thing as a free lunch. By keeping US short rates at abnormally low levels beyond the financial crisis and as growth bounces back beyond the dreams of the wildest optimists, the Fed increasingly seems to be trying to ‘feed the US economy for nothing’. This is worrying, for extended periods of cheap money typically come back with a hefty price tag.
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