Thursday, July 9, 2026 188 analyses RSS
Geopolitics Jul 9 STATE

The World Splinters Into Blocs, Not Borders

Global trade is not collapsing; it is being rewired. The world is sorting into overlapping economic patches — U.S.-led, China-centered, BRICS+, and a plurilateral trade web — while middle powers hedge, connector economies absorb diverted flows, and military redlines harden from Hormuz to Guyana. The result is not deglobalization but a messier, more expensive form of integration shaped by geopolitical sentiment as much as by geography.

Advertisement

Latest from each beat

All 69 →
News Jul 2 CAPITAL

The KOSPI Concentration Trap

South Korea announced an 800 trillion won Honam memory expansion on June 29–30 as foreigners sold a record 7.7 trillion won of Samsung and SK Hynix the same week — 92 percent of that day's KOSPI outflow. The disconnect is structural: two chipmakers now exceed 56 percent of the index, making KOSPI a leveraged bet on DRAM pricing, not Korean equities.

All 15 →
Jun 29 LABOR

The Utility Gap: Can AI Apps Justify the Buildout?

Artificial intelligence infrastructure is racing ahead of proven consumer willingness to pay. With free-to-paid conversion near six percent and enterprise carrying most revenue, the industry faces a utility test: enough daily engagement and durable subscriptions to justify megawatt-scale buildouts — or a cycle of dark racks, repriced debt, and cascading GPU obsolescence.

All 31 →
Jul 2 STATE

From Ships to Chips

For a decade the India–South Korea partnership under-delivered: Hallyu soared, Samsung and Hyundai dominated Indian consumer life, yet the 2010 CEPA left a $15.35 billion trade deficit by 2025–26. April–May 2026 changed the architecture — VOYAGES shipbuilding, a Digital Bridge on chips and AI, UPI–KFTC payment rails, and a Joint Strategic Vision through 2030 — as Act East met New Southern Policy in a fragmented world order.

All 36 →
Jun 19 STATE

The Court Will Redefine Who Is Born American

The Supreme Court will rule by early July on whether Trump can end birthright citizenship by executive order. The constitutional fight is abstract; the consequences begin in delivery rooms where hospitals assume every newborn is a citizen — and where losing that assumption breaks Medicaid and newborn care.

10 additional stories