British pound
Sterling finds itself in the limelight and trading at its recent highs as somewhat improbably a couple of bolder market commentators have suggested the UK will benefit as a result of the disaffection with the USA and the USD at present. Those commentators have obviously not been following the commentary about UK Chancellor Reeves’ running out of road and being forced into an increasingly tenuous position given her lack of economic success. Tax rises in the face of a set of economic releases, which the Chancellor dubbed “disappointing” cannot be ruled out it turns out by… her.
GBP/USD 1.3610.
Fuel Smuggling
A few years ago at the time of Al Qaeda and then ISIS, illegal sanctions busting fuel made its way from Iraq to the West despite efforts to stop it which spectacularly failed. That resulted in the funding of terrorist activity and well documented atrocities. While that doubtless still continues, the action on this front has now shifted to the USA. Surely not? An excellent in depth piece in the Financial Times earlier this week reported on the flow of diesel, petrol and oil from Texas to Mexico. As much as 25% of Mexico’s oil needs are thought to be met by shipping tankers from ports in Texas to Mexico where it is pumped direct from the ships into trucks so hardly either de minimis an activity or a well kept secret. That illegal activity is worth up to USD 20 billion per annum and goes a long way to explain US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s remarks about his determination to stop it which were difficult previously to understand.
EUR/USD 1.1593.