1. Good chronicle of Trump at War in the NYT.
2. List of a few impacts of the Gulf War from across the world.
3. Foreign national government holdings of US Treasuries drop to their lowest value in years as they sell the Treasuries to prop up their economies and currencies.
4. For all its cultural salience and ubiquity, Bollywood box office receipts were $1.45 bn in 2025!
One top producer who has worked with many of Bollywood’s top actors says the combination of cultural drift and waning star power is a deadly one. “If you’re bankrupt on creativity, then the only thing you’re banking on is stars,” he says. “Nobody’s coming to the movie theatre to watch a star any more.” This, he adds, is a major reason why several international studios abandoned their attempts to enter the Indian industry...Bollywood has remained resistant to outsiders. International studios such as Fox Star, Paramount and Sony entered the country more than a decade ago, looking to streamline the world’s largest movie-producing market, which remains parochial and dominated by family-run production houses. But through either mergers or losses, almost none exist in the country any more. Its films have also struggled to find audiences overseas. Unlike K-dramas from South Korea or Turkish soap series, Bollywood is yet to find breakout success globally, beyond the south Asian diaspora.
And this is an important market failure
The decline in Bollywood stars’ pulling power has not been reflected in either their remuneration or their creative influence. Male leads in particular wield immense power over which films get made and command salaries that are far in excess of what female actors can demand. Although Bollywood budgets are much smaller overall than those of the big five studios in the US, male stars often demand half or more of a film’s budget — compared with at most a quarter in Hollywood. The eminent producer says the industry still wants to “helicopter the star, do the least amount of work [possible] and try and do some razzmatazz, and everyone’s followed the herd mentality”. Shailesh Kapoor, chief executive of Ormax, says the multimillion-dollar fees that some top actors demand are driven by the free market. “Stars do not downgrade their fee if their last movie doesn’t work well . . . because somebody is willing to pay.”
Oxford Economics said this week it estimates a six-month interruption of flows through the Strait of Hormuz would create a 13mn barrels per day gap in global oil supplies, triggering a worldwide recession. “That represents an unprecedented shortage of around 12 per cent of consumption, leading to widespread rationing concentrated in emerging economies, with significant hits to activity and supply chain disruption,” said the advisory group.
The Strait of Hormuz chokehold provides China with enough ideas on how to implement a similar strategy in the Taiwan Straits.
Beijing would declare the right to control who and what comes and goes from the island. China could demonstrate resolve by firing missiles or bullets and declaring “exclusion zones”. Even short of outright conflict, if escalation risk seemed high, private carriers would face pressure to avoid the waters and airspace around Taiwan. The standard “Five Powers Clause” in commercial war-risk insurance terminates coverage in any conflict between the US and China. If it has proved hard to persuade shipping companies to risk sailing amid a few unguided Iranian drones, imagine asking them to take on the People’s Liberation Army.
More on the oil supply squeeze.
Fatih Birol, the head of the International Energy Agency, has called this “the greatest global energy security threat in history” — much worse than the 1970s oil crisis, the Covid pandemic or Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. This conflict has disrupted a bigger share of the global oil and gas trade, and there is no way to quickly fill the gap.
6. FT series on how Apple became obsessed with quality. The first one is about how it learned the quality focus from Japan.
7. NYT on Pakistan's remarkable pivot to green energy.
For governments weighing how quickly to pivot to clean energy, Pakistan’s recent history may offer some lessons. The country was hit hard by the energy shock that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. It was unable to afford suddenly exorbitant gas imports, so many of its scheduled shipments were rerouted to wealthier European buyers. But a deluge of inexpensive solar panels from China has transformed Pakistan’s energy system and helped insulate it from the current scarcity of liquefied natural gas. Solar now generates nearly 30 percent of its electricity, up from just 3 percent in 2020. The Center for Research on Energy and Clean Air has estimated that the solar boom will help Pakistan avoid $7 billion in fossil fuel imports this year. That’s shielding Pakistanis from real pain.
8. Sekhar Gupta makes an important point about India's fertilizer import dependency and advocates the use of coal gassification to domestically manufacture them.
Coal, we know, is an unpopular fuel... And while coal-to-chemicals is also a polluting activity, it is much less so than burning it in power plants... while burning coal for electricity may be evil, turning it into gas is much less so... Fertiliser shortages are an even bigger threat because this affects our food security... China produces more than 90 per cent of its ammonia from coal gasification. Ammonia is essential for DAP. India imports much of it and so severe are the shortages that to prevent rioting or looting by desperate farmers, many states store the supplies in their police stations, allocating to farmers on the basis of land holdings and Aadhaar-based registrations. Now hold your breath. China uses syngas (synthetic gas) derived from coal to produce 40 per cent of the entire world’s urea. It also produces 54 per cent of all of the world’s methanol, around 70 per cent of it from coal... Among the large agricultural producers, we’re the most import-dependent for our fertilisers... Our crippling dependence on fertiliser imports is also ship-to-mouth existence by another name. This war in the Gulf has driven home these vulnerabilities.
9. The GPU race
Graphic processing units (GPU) are the “oil” on which AI runs... India aims to increase its current stock of 38,000 GPUs to 100,000 by the end of the year, with a target of 1 to 2 million by 2030. The state is providing GPU “time” as a service at a subsidised rate of only ₹65 per hour to foster application development by startups... The US has a current inventory of 5 to 7 million GPUs, and China has 1.5 to 2.5 million. The target for the US is 25 to 30 million by 2035 and China plans to achieve 10 to 15 million by the same date.





















