The wars reshaping the Middle East are creating mounting pressure on the sovereign wealth funds that manage roughly $6 trillion in accumulated Gulf oil revenues. These funds, anchored by entities such as Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, Abu Dhabi's ADIA and Mubadala, and Kuwait's KIA, have long served as stabilization buffers and long-term capital allocators for their home governments. Sustained regional conflict strains that dual mandate by forcing governments to draw down reserves to cover rising defense expenditure and domestic spending commitments rather than deploy capital into global markets. The mechanism is straightforward: higher war-related fiscal outlays reduce the surplus revenues available for fund inflows, while geopolitical risk reprices the region's asset base and complicates cross-border deal-making. For global markets, Gulf SWFs are significant LPs in private equity, real estate, and technology, any reallocation or withdrawal of that capital would register across asset classes. Whether funds shrink through reduced inflows or active drawdowns, the direction of travel tightens the supply of patient, long-duration capital that has underwritten major deals over the past decade.
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.
Venezuela's twin earthquakes, magnitudes 7.2 and 7.5, have killed at least 164 people and injured 971, interim president Delcy Rodriguez confirmed Thursday. The quakes are the country's strongest since 1900, collapsing buildings across Caracas and prompting a state of emergency, with the death toll expected to rise as