Tom Holland

Tom Holland

Deputy Global Research Director

Tom helps to steer Gavekal’s global research, with a special focus on geoeconomics and energy markets. Before joining Gavekal in 2014 he worked as an analyst and commentator at media organizations including CNBC, The Wall Street Journal and the Far Eastern Economic Review, earning his spurs as the lead foreign exchange analyst for Dow Jones during the 1997-98 Asian currency crisis. He originally started his working life as an exploration geologist, until a collapse in commodity prices forced him into journalism as the traditional refuge of the otherwise unemployable.

Tom Holland's Articles

Selected research

Geoeconomic Monitor: After Beijing
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.
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Geoeconomic Monitor: Casualties
Geoeconomic Monitor: Casualties
Tom Holland, Tom Miller, Yanmei Xie
1 May 2026
The United Arab Emirates' decision to pull out of Opec was a surprise, but it did not come out of the blue. The UAE has long complained about the tightness of its Opec production quotas. However, the timing of its announcement suggests the decision was more driven by its hard line against Iran and its frustration with the more conciliatory stance of other Gulf Arab states led by Saudi Arabia. This may have post-war costs for the UAE, writes Tom Holland. Also, Tom Miller examines the position of Pakistan after the UAE called in a US$3.5bn loan to Islamabad, and Yanmei Xie looks at Spain's open-door policy for Chinese inward investment.
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The Message In The Oil Curve
14 Apr 2026
A number of clients have asked about the extraordinary backwardation of the oil market, which has seen the price of long-dated futures remain relatively anchored even as prices at the extreme short end of the curve have surged. "Doesn’t this backwardation mean that market participants are confident the Iran war is effectively over?" Unfortunately, the answer is “No, not really.” Tom explains why.
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