Vantcast — The World Edition

This week: Daniel Yergin on why the Strait of Hormuz crisis signals a genuinely different world — and what that means for boards beyond the energy market. The quiet but accelerating infrastructure behind renminbi internationalisation, and why it matters even if you're not in China-adjacent trade. And what the World Bank's new position on industrial policy actually means for executives betting on government support. The IMF's macro layer sitting underneath all of it.

What is Vantcast — The World Edition?

The weekly macro briefing for senior leaders with global exposure — translating geopolitics, trade, and economic shifts into the questions your organisation should be stress-testing right now.

Vantcast World covers the forces reshaping how businesses operate across borders: energy markets and supply chain fragmentation, central bank decisions and currency dynamics, trade policy and regulatory divergence, and the geopolitical developments that move commodity prices, capital flows, and competitive positioning. Each edition connects the macro signal to the strategic question — what does this mean for your operating model, your cost base, your markets?

A deep-dive. Every week. Designed for CFOs, COOs, strategy leads, and executives with material exposure to global markets, supply chains, or cross-border operations.

New episodes every Monday.

Sarah:

Right now, shipping companies are quietly paying up to $4,000,000 per vessel, just to skip the line.

James:

Wow. Per vessel.

Sarah:

Per vessel. Yeah. $4,000,000 just to get priority crossing through the Panama Canal. And they aren't paying that astronomical premium because of anything happening in The Americas.

James:

Right. It's completely disconnected geographically.

Sarah:

Exactly. They are paying it because a tiny, very specific stretch of water on the complete opposite side of the planet is, well, it's essentially being held hostage, and that is sending a massive shockwave through the entire global system.

James:

It's the butterfly effect, but, you know, with massive cargo ships.

Sarah:

Yeah. You know, when you walk into a massive modern skyscraper, you never actually think about the steel foundation buried deep underground. You just trust that it's there.

James:

Holding everything up. Right?

Sarah:

You only start thinking about that foundation when a jagged crack suddenly appears in the drywall on the 50th Floor. And that is exactly what is happening to global commerce right now. We are seeing cracks in the drywall.

James:

That's a really great way to frame it.

Sarah:

Welcome to today's deep dive. Whether you are the learner prepping for a high stakes board meeting, looking to stress test your investment portfolio, or, you know, you're just insanely curious about the hidden gears turning the world right now, you are in the exact right place.

James:

Absolutely. Because today, we're looking at the foundation itself.

Sarah:

We have a massive stack of intelligence from a recent Vantcast briefing. And our mission today is to synthesize these high level notes and unpack a really profound structural shift.

James:

Yeah. We are examining what we're calling the three invisible pillars of the global economy. So that's, open sea lanes, the US dollar acting as the world's default currency, and predictable government economic policies. Right. For decades, businesses and individuals just assumed those pillars were rock solid.

James:

But today, the data shows they're visibly fracturing.

Sarah:

And we have the receipts to prove it. The source material on the table today is heavy hitting. We are looking at, recent strategic assessments from energy historian Daniel Juergen.

James:

Which is fascinating stuff.

Sarah:

Plus, April 2026 macroeconomic projections from the IMF, deep reporting from The Economist, a major strategic pivot from the World Bank, and some incredibly revealing supply chain analytics from McKinsey.

James:

It's a lot to get through, but it all connects.

Sarah:

Okay. Let's unpack this, starting with the physical reality of how things actually move around the planet.

James:

Yep. Looking at the physical geography of risk is really the only logical starting point. Because, you know, before any financial transaction settles, before any government policy is enacted, the actual physical goods have to move from point a to point b.

Sarah:

Right. You can't digitize physical cargo.

James:

Exactly. And right now, the most critical physical choke points on the map are choking.

Sarah:

The Vantcast notes highlight a quote from Daniel Juergen that honestly made me stop and reread it. For context, Daniel Juergen is the vice chairman of S and T Global. He's a Pulitzer Prize winning author and arguably the foremost authority on the history of energy.

James:

He doesn't make statements lightly.

Sarah:

No, he doesn't. He's looking at the ongoing crisis in the Strait Of Hormuz, and he isn't just saying energy markets are going to have a rough quarter. He is saying a genuinely different world will emerge from this. Full stop. A different world.

James:

It is a massive statement. Yeah. And, understanding why he makes it requires looking at the raw mechanics of geopolitical power.

Sarah:

Walk us through that.

James:

So the Strait Of Hormuz is a remarkably narrow stretch of water, but the International Energy Agency estimates it handles nearly 15,000,000 barrels of oil per day.

Sarah:

Wait, 15,000,000 barrels?

James:

Every single day. That is roughly 34% of the entire global crude oil trade in 2025. So instead of thinking of it as a shipping lane, think of it as a single aging electrical transformer that just happens to power a third of a sprawling metropolitan grid.

Sarah:

Okay. Yeah. So if that single transformer blows, the rerouting of power causes rolling blackouts everywhere else.

James:

Exactly. 34% concentrated in one highly vulnerable spot. When that slows down, everyone down the line feels the voltage drop.

Sarah:

I mean, I hear the geopolitical theory there, but I want to push back a little bit on behalf of you, our listener, because geopolitical risk sometimes feels like a buzzword analysts throw around when they don't wanna do the hard math on a spreadsheet.

James:

Oh, I totally get that.

Sarah:

How does this theoretical risk actually hit an actual company's bottom line?

James:

The hard math is absolutely brutal here. Let's look at SLB. They are a massive tier one oil field services company with a deep operational footprint in The Middle East and Asia.

Sarah:

Huge company. Yeah.

James:

In their Q1 earnings, their revenue in that region fell by 10%.

Sarah:

10%.

James:

And that wasn't a general market downturn. That was directly attributed to supply chain disruptions related to this exact conflict. Yeah. 10% of regional revenue was entirely wiped out by a physical choke point bottleneck.

Sarah:

A 10% hit to top line regional revenue is catastrophic. I mean that is working capital just vanishing overnight because a ship couldn't pass through a strait.

James:

Right. And the pain doesn't stop at the regional level because these disruptions cascade. When one physical route is blocked, ships are forced to go somewhere else.

Sarah:

Which brings us back to the Reuters report from the top of the deep dive.

James:

The $4,000,000 per vessel for priority crossing in the Panama Canal. They are doing that because of the rerouting cascades originating from the Hormuz disruption.

Sarah:

It's all connected.

James:

Ships take longer routes which ties up vessel capacity which causes a shortage of available ships globally.

Sarah:

Which leads to a massive bidding war.

James:

Yes. A bidding war at other totally unrelated choke points.

Sarah:

So the cost of a physical bottleneck isn't just an abstract delay. It is an immediate multimillion dollar tax on moving basic goods.

James:

If we connect this to the bigger picture, you start to see how these physical bottlenecks infect the entire macroeconomic layer.

Sarah:

Okay. Let's look at that.

James:

The IMF's April 2026 World Economic Outlook projects global growth of 3.1% in 2026 and three point two percent in 2027.

Sarah:

I mean, on the surface, 3% growth doesn't sound terrible. It sounds like a steady economic environment.

James:

The danger lies in the fine print. That projection is based entirely on a limited conflict assumption.

Sarah:

Ah, meaning if things get worse, that number plummets.

James:

Exactly. The IMF explicitly flags the transmission mechanism that turns a block straight into a global economic drag. Let's trace the math.

Sarah:

Let's do it.

James:

A block straight forces ships to take longer routes. Longer routes mean immediate spikes in container rates and astronomical shipping insurance premiums.

Sarah:

Right, because the risk is higher.

James:

Those premiums force fuel and input costs higher for manufacturers. Manufacturers then pass those costs onto consumers which keeps core inflation incredibly sticky.

Sarah:

And sticky inflation forces central banks to keep interest rates higher for much longer.

James:

Bingo. So the direct result of a contested C lane is that your corporate revolving credit facility or, you know, your personal mortgage rate stays hundreds of basis points higher than projected. It's a direct domino effect.

Sarah:

The physical friction creates immediate financial friction. It makes perfect sense why McKinsey's analytics are suddenly highlighting maritime infrastructure, like shipbuilding capacity, port modernization, and naval architecture as some of the most vital strategic sectors in the world right now.

James:

They are critical.

Sarah:

If SLB is losing 10% of its revenue and shippers are paying $4,000,000 to skip a canal line, companies and countries suddenly have a massive financial incentive to find alternative, cheaper ways to conduct and settle their trades.

James:

Which brings us to the second cracking pillar.

Sarah:

The plumbing of global finance. Because changing how the goods physically move inevitably changes how the money pays for those goods.

James:

Yeah. The Vantcast notes point to a quiet, highly significant shift in currency markets, heavily driven by China.

Sarah:

The Economist did a deep dive on this specific dynamic. Xi Jinping has wanted to elevate the Renminbi, the RMB, into a powerful global currency for years.

James:

It's been a long term goal.

Sarah:

Right. And The Economist argues that the US trade war and the subsequent weaponization of the dollar through sanctions essentially accelerated that ambition. But I wanna do a massive reality check here.

James:

Okay. Lay it on me.

Sarah:

Because I feel like I have read a death of the US dollar think piece every single year for the last decade.

James:

The skepticism is highly warranted. I mean, the structural dominance of the dollar is deeply, deeply entrenched.

Sarah:

When I look at the actual data, the IMF's COFR data, which tracks the currency composition of official foreign exchange reserves, it shows the US dollar still overwhelmingly dominates. It sits at about 57% of global FX reserves.

James:

A massive lead.

Sarah:

The RMB is sitting at under two percent. And even after a brief highly publicized spike following the start of the Ukraine war, the RMB's share of global payments actually dropped back down to around 3%.

James:

Right.

Sarah:

So we're looking at 57% versus 2%. That simply does not look like a dollar in crisis.

James:

Your data is spot on. The balance sheet layer the actual reserves held in the vaults of central banks is overwhelmingly dollar dominant. But what's fascinating here is that the structural shift isn't happening on the central bank balance sheets.

Sarah:

Okay, where is it happening then?

James:

It is happening in the underlying plumbing.

Sarah:

So you're drawing a distinction between the money itself and the pipes that move the money?

James:

Exactly that. For decades, the global financial system relied almost exclusively on SWIFT, and SWIFT functions like a secure messaging system that tells banks to move money. Because the dollar is dominant, most of those SWIFT messages route through correspondent banks in New York. China recognized that relying on New York correspondent banks was a massive strategic vulnerability.

Sarah:

If The US decides to cut them off, they're frozen out of global trade.

James:

Exactly. So they aren't just trying to get countries to hold more RMB in their vaults, they are actively building out alternative cross border payment systems, like CIPS the cross border interbank payment system.

Sarah:

Furthermore,

James:

they are signing bilateral currency swap agreements with trading partners. A bilateral swap essentially allows two countries to trade with each other using their own local currencies.

Sarah:

So they completely bypass the need to convert those funds into U. S. Dollars or route them through a New York bank?

James:

Yes. It is not a story of total global de dollarization, it is a story of selective corridor level diversification.

Sarah:

So, it's like laying down an alternative set of train track across a continent.

James:

That's a perfect analogy.

Sarah:

Even if 95% of the global freight still uses the old, incredibly reliable US dollar tracks today, the fact remains that the new RMD tracks now exist. They are fully functional and tested. Tested. So if a country ever gets locked out of the main tracks due to sanctions, or if they just want to avoid the geopolitical tollbooth, they can quietly route their cargo over the new system.

James:

That analogy captures the mechanism perfectly. And once those parallel tracks are fully operational, the complexity for global businesses skyrockets. You no longer need the whole world to abandon the dollar to feel the structural impact.

Sarah:

Give me an example of how that hits a business.

James:

Imagine you are a European manufacturer, and your key suppliers in Asia quietly decide to start settling their regional trades on Chinese payment rails using bilateral swaps to save on conversion costs.

Sarah:

Okay.

James:

Suddenly, your corporate treasury department has to deal with a fractured, multi currency environment. The universal, frictionless assumption that everything converts to dollars seamlessly is actively being stress tested.

Sarah:

Central banks are clearly reading the writing on the wall regarding this fragmentation.

James:

Oh, absolutely.

Sarah:

The Vantcast notes cite a revealing finding from the Atlantic Council. Central banks around the world are hoarding physical gold at record levels, and they aren't doing that because gold yields a great return.

James:

No. Gold doesn't pay a yield.

Sarah:

Right. They are physically stockpiling gold to hedge against exactly this kind of financial system fragmentation. They are buying the ultimate insurance policy against the dollar plumbing breaking down or being denied to them.

James:

When you have physical shipping lanes fracturing into dangerous choke points and you have parallel financial tracks being laid down to bypass the dollar, governments are not gonna just sit back and watch the chaos unfold.

Sarah:

They're gonna step in.

James:

They step in to aggressively direct the traffic and build their own domestic firewalls.

Sarah:

Which brings us to the third cracking pillar, the wild world of industrial policy. The aggressive return of the government hand in the free market.

James:

This is a huge shift.

Sarah:

The Vantcast notes point out a massive, almost comical irony highlighted by The Economist regarding the World Bank.

James:

I love this part.

Sarah:

For thirty years, the World Bank's golden rule for developing nations was brutally simple. Privatize your state owned industries, deregulate your markets, and let the invisible hand of free trade do the heavy lifting?

James:

It was the absolute bedrock of the classic liberal economic consensus. State intervention was viewed as inherently inefficient.

Sarah:

But recently, the World Bank released a report that a lot of interventionist governments around the world are reading as a massive U-turn.

James:

Yeah, a total reversal.

Sarah:

They are taking this report as a blinking green light for heavy state intervention and massive government subsidies. And the data from The Economist shows everyone is jumping on board the subsidy train.

James:

Everyone.

Sarah:

Today, a 183 economies around the world are explicitly targeting at least one specific industry in their national development Everyone from Washington to Brussels to Beijing is trying to build a subsidized national champion.

James:

The irony is rich, but the nuance here is incredibly critical. The Economist rightly points out that many governments are misinterpreting the actual mechanics of the World Bank's position.

Sarah:

Here's where it gets really interesting. Because the World Bank is absolutely not saying that government should just blindly throw taxpayer money at politically favored national champions.

James:

No. Not

Sarah:

The report's actual conclusion on industrial policy is highly conditional.

James:

It's extremely conditional. The World Bank is acknowledging that industrial policy can work, but only under very specific institutional conditions and with incredibly precise design characteristics. If a government just hands out subsidies to a company because the CEO has great political connections, they aren't building a resilient industry. They are just incinerating capital and distorting the market.

Sarah:

McKinsey brought the receipts on this concept, specifically looking at the global battery supply chain. I mean, every major economy on earth wants to own the future of electric vehicle batteries.

James:

McKinsey's research provides a perfect test case here. Their data shows that Western battery manufacturing projects can actually be highly competitive on a global scale. But there is a massive mechanical caveat.

Sarah:

Walk us through how a poorly designed subsidy actually fails in practice. What is the mechanism of failure there?

James:

It comes down to technological prescription. Let's say a government decides to heavily subsidize one specific type of battery chemistry. Say they pour billions into traditional lithium ion factories because that is the current standard.

Sarah:

Makes sense on the surface.

James:

Right, but they are prescribing a technological winner. But the private market moves incredibly fast. If a private startup suddenly invents a cheaper, more efficient solid state battery a year later, the market will instantly pivot to the new technology.

Sarah:

Leaving the government backed lithium ion factories completely obsolete.

James:

Exactly. The subsidized factories become massive empty monuments to bad policy. To actually work, the McKinsey research stresses that incentives have to be technology neutral and market driven.

Sarah:

So they shouldn't care how you get there.

James:

Right. The government should reward the outcome, like energy density or lower emissions, not prescribe the specific path to get there. Design matters just as much as the capital itself.

Sarah:

That makes complete mechanical sense. So if a business leader blindly chases a government subsidy just because the money is cheap, without checking if the underlying policy actually makes long term economic sense, they are essentially building a massive factory on rented land.

James:

That's a great way to put it.

Sarah:

If the political winds shift or if a new administration comes into power and wipes out that specific technology subsidy, that company is left holding an incredibly expensive stranded asset.

James:

That is the exact systemic warning the World Bank is issuing. Quarterly designed industrial policy completely distorts investment signals. It makes terrible ideas look highly profitable in the short term. And right now, with The US, the EU, and China all running massive, competing industrial policy agendas simultaneously, the risk of a corporate board investing billions based on a distorted, politically driven signal is higher than it has been in a generation.

Sarah:

Okay. We have covered a massive amount of ground here. We've traced the domino effect from contested waters in The Middle East, mapped out the alternative plumbing of Chinese financial settlement, and dissected the conditional trap of government industrial subsidies.

James:

It's a lot to process.

Sarah:

So what does this all mean? If you're listening to this, if you're managing a global team, running a supply chain, or just trying to navigate your own personal investments, how do you actually apply this fragmented reality?

James:

The intelligence in the Vantcast notes distills this complex landscape down into three strategic stress tests. These are three vital questions you have to be able to answer to survive in a fragmented world.

Sarah:

Okay. If the first cracking pillar is the physical supply chain, then test one has to be the physical test.

James:

Exactly. If a major choke point like the Strait Of Hormuz or the Panama Canal was disrupted for six months, what is the literal mathematical cost to your business?

Sarah:

And based on the data we looked at, you can't just rely on a vague theoretical model. You need to use SLB's 10% regional revenue drop as a real world benchmark. Right. You need to know your exact exposure with named alternate routes and named backup suppliers.

James:

That is precisely how you apply the physical test. Hard numbers and named alternatives.

Sarah:

Following the logic of our discussion, test two has to be the financial test. This is about treasury exposure.

James:

Yeah. The money plumbing.

Sarah:

Is your corporate treasury department built to operate seamlessly in one monetary architecture? Or two, if your key suppliers in Asia suddenly demand to settle trades in a corridor that bypasses the US dollar, are you structurally exposed to massive conversion costs or settlement delays?

James:

The financial test is no longer a hypothetical exercise. And that leads to the final test. Test three, the policy test. If your business model or the specific industry you are heavily invested in is currently riding the wave of a massive government subsidy, could your margins survive a sudden change in government?

Sarah:

Have you stress tested your balance sheet against a total overnight reversal of policy.

James:

Exactly.

Sarah:

Those are brutal, unforgiving questions, but they are absolutely necessary to ask.

James:

This raises an important question for immediate action. The strategist behind the briefing suggests a ninety day actionable rule for anyone operating in this environment. It is incredibly straightforward.

Sarah:

Okay, lay it out for us.

James:

Map your three most critical external dependencies right now. Write down your single biggest dependency for energy or physical supply, your biggest dependency for currency or finance, and your biggest dependency on government policy.

Sarah:

Got it.

James:

Once you name those three dependencies, ask yourself what has explicitly changed about them in the exact last ninety days.

Sarah:

That is brilliant framing because if you can't answer that question from memory right now, you don't actually own the risk. You are managing your career or your business purely by assumption.

James:

Right.

Sarah:

You're assuming the invisible pillars are still holding up the building even while the drywall is audibly cracking all around you.

James:

When the macroeconomic environment was highly stable, a generic, highly globalized strategy worked perfectly fine. In a fragmented, multipolar environment, relying on yesterday's baseline assumptions is the single biggest operational risk you can take.

Sarah:

I wanna thank you for bringing such incredible clarity to this material. Connecting the mechanical dots between physical shipping lane disruptions, alternative currency payment rails, and the distorted investment signals of industrial subsidies really paints a vivid, actionable picture of this new reality.

James:

It is an incredibly complex puzzle, but, once you take the time to understand how the pieces mechanically fit together, you can't unsee the broader picture.

Sarah:

No, you really can't. Now, to you our listener, I want to leave you with a final thought to ponder as you go about your day. We've spent our time deeply analyzing how physical supply chains, financial payment systems, and government policies are all fragmenting into these customized, highly protected regional blocks.

James:

Right.

Sarah:

But what does that fragmentation mean for the human element? For the last thirty years, we have celebrated the idea of being a global citizen or building a seamless multinational career.

James:

Yeah. That was the ultimate goal.

Sarah:

But if the entire world is literally splitting into parallel economic and physical tracks, will our individual skill sets, our talents, and our professional networks have to become just as localized and region specific as the new supply chains?

James:

That's a fascinating question.

Sarah:

Are we moving away from a world of interchangeable global executives and entering a world where you have to become a specialized corridor expert just to survive? If the invisible foundation of global commerce is fundamentally shifting, the way we build our own lives and careers on top of it might need a whole new blueprint.

James:

Something to really think about.

Sarah:

Absolutely. Keep asking the hard questions, stay curious, and we'll catch you on the next deep dive.