Global markets closed the day shaped by geopolitics, regulation, and shifting risk appetite.
US plans around Venezuela’s oil sector met skepticism from energy majors, while NVIDIA’s China ambitions remain stuck in policy gridlock.
Investors sought safety as gold surged toward record levels on dovish Fed signals and political turmoil.
In India, antitrust authorities widened a sweeping steel price-collusion probe, raising the prospect of heavy penalties and renewed scrutiny of corporate governance.
Venezuela’s oil bets meet reality
Trump’s swagger over Venezuela’s oil bounty hit a wall Monday when Reuters reported that US oil majors, Chevron, ExxonMobil, and ConocoPhillips, haven’t been briefed by the administration on the intervention.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Secretary of State Marco Rubio plan meetings this week, but the silence beforehand signals trouble.
Oil executives are spooked: rebuilding Venezuela’s gutted infrastructure could cost $110 billion and take until 2030, according to Rystad Energy.
Chevron, already operating under a special waiver, remains cautious; Exxon and ConocoPhillips were expropriated before and burned.
Trump claims companies are “excited,” but industry insiders tell a different story; they are reluctant to commit billions to an unstable political situation with murky return timelines.
The kicker: the administration maintained the oil blockade, preventing Venezuela from exporting crude freely.
NVIDIA China sales stalled
NVIDIA CFO Colette Kress declared Monday that Washington is “working feverishly” to process H200 export licenses for China, but no ship date has materialised.
The urgency is real: Chinese firms have ordered 2+ million H200 units for 2026, six times NVIDIA’s current 700,000-unit inventory.
ByteDance alone plans to spend 100 billion yuan ($14 billion) on chips this year if sales clear both governments.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang emphasized “strong demand,” but the bottleneck isn’t supply; it’s policy.
Washington approved exports in principle with a 25% revenue share, yet Commerce Department license-granting remains opaque.
Beijing hasn’t approved imports either, weighing whether H200 access aligns with domestic AI chip self-sufficiency goals.
Gold nears record high
Gold climbed to a one-week peak Tuesday, trading at $4,470 per ounce, tantalisingly close to its December 26 record of $4,550.
Two converging forces drove the safe-haven rally. First, dovish Fed rhetoric: Minneapolis President Neel Kashkari signaled inflation is easing while unemployment risks rising, nudging market odds for at least two rate cuts this year.
Second, Venezuela’s geopolitical implosion after Trump’s seizure of Nicolas Maduro triggered capital flight into hard assets.
Silver surged 3.5% to $79.18, posting 147% gains in 2025, wildly outpacing gold’s 64% ascent. Platinum jumped 2.8% to $2,334.
The Friday jobs report looms large; if employment disappoints, expect gold to smash its record as traders fully price rate-cut odds.
India probes steel price collusion
India’s antitrust watchdog landed a bombshell Tuesday, finding that Tata Steel, JSW Steel, and state-owned SAIL colluded on steel prices with 25 other firms between 2015 and 2023, an exclusive report by Reuters said.
A confidential October order names 56 executives, including JSW’s billionaire Sajjan Jindal and Tata Steel CEO T.V. Narendran, as personally liable.
WhatsApp evidence exposed the smoking gun: messages among regional steel groups explicitly discussing price fixing and production cuts.
The penalty hammer looms brutal: CCI can slap fines up to 10% of annual turnover or three times profit per violation year, potentially costing Tata $1.4 billion and JSW $1.4 billion (FY2025 revenues).
The investigation, triggered by builders’ 2021 allegations of 55% price hikes, has expanded massively from nine companies to 31 entities.
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