The conflict in the Persian Gulf is directly disrupting energy supply chains that Pakistan depends on, pushing the country into prolonged power outages and deepening an existing electricity crisis. Pakistan, like several other emerging Asian economies, has been disproportionately exposed to the global energy shock, lacking the foreign reserves and long-term supply contracts that insulate wealthier importers. The mechanism is straightforward: Gulf disruption tightens spot LNG and oil markets, and price-sensitive buyers like Pakistan are first to lose access or face unaffordable import costs, forcing utilities to cut generation. The broader pattern matters for investors and policymakers tracking frontier and emerging market sovereign risk in Asia, energy import dependence is amplifying fiscal stress, squeezing foreign exchange buffers, and raising the probability of sovereign credit strain. Countries to watch include those running large current account deficits funded partly by remittances from Gulf workers, a flow that war disruption could also compress simultaneously.
Venezuela's earthquake death toll has reached 1,430 with the US Geological Survey warning fatalities could top 10,000, placing it among Latin America's deadliest in a century. US military planes are landing in Caracas, Washington is mobilising $150 million in aid, and rescue teams from 17 countries are on the ground.
Iranian armed forces attacked a cargo ship in the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday, briefly halting traffic through the waterway. The strike threatens a fragile US-Iran arrangement and could push shipping insurance costs and oil prices higher.
The US has struck Iran, with President Trump citing an Iranian attack on a ship in the Strait of Hormuz as justification. The action raises immediate risks for global oil flows through one of the world's most critical shipping chokepoints.
The US struck ten Iranian targets on the second consecutive day of military action, putting a fragile ceasefire under serious pressure. The escalation raises immediate risks for Gulf shipping, global oil supply, and regional stability.