Where the math is defensible.
Long-form research on live enterprise decisions. Publication is selective. Every number traces to a named source. No takes without evidence.
ASEAN 2026: Tariff Whiplash, FDI Surge, and the Vietnam Malaysia Thailand Indonesia Quartet
The April 2025 reciprocal tariff schedule, the 90 day pause, and the bilateral negotiation track have rewritten the China plus one playbook. Capital is still moving, but the geography of advantage has narrowed around four ASEAN economies whose tariff exposure, FDI flows, and cluster maturity diverge sharply.
On April 2, 2025 the United States set country specific reciprocal tariffs that put Vietnam at 46 percent, Cambodia at 49 percent, Thailand at 36 percent, Indonesia at 32 percent, Malaysia at 24 percent, the Philippines at 17 percent, and Singapore at 10 percent. A 90 day pause one week later replaced the schedule with a 10 percent univer...
India Capex Spend Trajectory 2026: Government, Private, and FDI in One Frame
India's investment-to-GDP ratio is climbing back toward 34 percent, but the composition behind the headline determines whether the cycle broadens or stalls.
India's capex story in 2026 is one of three engines pulling at different speeds. Union Budget capital outlay has nearly tripled since FY20, state capex is recovering after the FY24 election lull, and central public sector enterprises are being nudged to front-load investment. Private capex is finally turning, with ASCB credit to industry ...
India and China in 2026: Patrols Resume, Trade Reopens, Trust Stays Conditional
After a four year freeze that began with the Galwan clash, Delhi and Beijing have reopened the boundary, restored business visas, and resumed direct flights. The economic rewiring runs ahead of the political reset, with a record USD 85 billion bilateral deficit forcing Press Note 3 reform on the Indian side.
The India and China relationship in 2026 sits at a managed thaw rather than a strategic reset. The October 21, 2024 Ministry of External Affairs announcement that Indian and Chinese troops would resume coordinated patrolling at Demchok and Depsang, followed by the Modi and Xi meeting at the Kazan BRICS summit on October 23, 2024, ended th...
Prabowo year one: governance, Danantara, and the soft repricing of the Indonesia trade
October 2024 to October 2025 stress tested the Prabowo administration's appetite for fiscal discretion, executive consolidation of state assets, and a foreign policy reset toward BRICS without rupturing the orthodox anchors that underwrote the Widodo decade.
Prabowo Subianto's first twelve months produced a governance regime distinct from anything in post 1998 Indonesia. The cabinet swelled to 109 ministers and vice ministers, Sri Mulyani Indrawati was replaced at Keuangan in February 2025, Bahlil Lahadalia consolidated power across investment and energy, and the Danantara holding launched in...
Ireland at Fifteen Percent: The Pillar Two Transition and the Stickiness of the Cluster
The 12.5 percent rate that built modern Ireland is gone for the largest multinationals, replaced by a 15 percent floor enforced through QDMTT and IIR. Corporate tax receipts kept climbing through the transition. The question is whether agglomeration outlasts arbitrage.
Ireland transposed EU Council Directive 2022/2523 through Part 4A of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997, inserted by the Finance (No. 2) Act 2023. From accounting periods beginning on or after 31 December 2023, Irish constituent entities of multinational groups with consolidated revenue at or above EUR 750 million pay an effective 15 percen...
Ireland's Corporation Tax Windfall and the Future Ireland Fund: Sovereign Savings Against a Concentrated Base
The 13.0 billion euro Apple State Aid disbursement and a 27.8 billion euro 2024 corporation tax take pushed Ireland's headline surplus to 25.0 billion euro, but the Irish Fiscal Advisory Council estimates that ten firms generate 56 percent of receipts. The Future Ireland Fund and the Infrastructure, Climate and Nature Fund are the policy answer for the 2025 to 2035 window, and Pillar Two and US tariff risk are the live threats.
Ireland's exchequer collected 27.8 billion euro in corporation tax in 2024, equal to 33 percent of total tax revenue, with an additional 14.1 billion euro in Apple back taxes plus interest received in tranches under the Court of Justice of the European Union ruling in C-465/20 of September 10, 2024. The 2024 general government surplus rea...
Mexico's Judicial Reset: Sheinbaum, Plan C, and the Rule of Law Premium
Claudia Sheinbaum took office on October 1, 2024 with a Morena supermajority and a constitutional amendment converting all 7,000 federal judges into elected officials. The first judicial elections in June 2025 closed with 13 percent turnout and benches dominated by Morena-aligned candidates. The peso has carried an extra 200 basis points of risk premium, FDI announcements have been reshuffled, and the July 2026 USMCA review is now the binding constraint on Mexico's institutional perimeter.
Claudia Sheinbaum won the June 2, 2024 presidential election with 35.9 million votes and a 59.8 percent share, the largest mandate in modern Mexican democracy. She inherited from Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador a parliamentary configuration that delivered Morena and allies a qualified two-thirds majority in the Chamber of Deputies and 86 of 1...
Mexico nearshoring in 2026: where the math actually clears
Mexico's nearshoring narrative is real in some sectors and aspirational in others. The 2026 USMCA review window, capacity ceilings, and security risk separate the contracts that close from the press releases that do not.
Mexico has captured a meaningful share of US import demand displaced from China since 2018, but the gains are concentrated in autos, machinery, and a narrow band of electronics, not in textiles or labor intensive assembly. FDI flows reported by Banxico and Secretaria de Economia confirm rising commitments, yet greenfield announcements out...
Mexico in 2026: Nearshoring, the USMCA Review, and the Tariff Shock Absorber
Eighteen months into the Sheinbaum administration, nearshoring has stopped being a press-release category and has become a contested allocation problem. Plan Mexico, the July 2026 USMCA review, and a Trump tariff regime that flicks on and off have compressed the planning horizon for OEMs, contract manufacturers, and the peso curve into rolling six-week windows.
Claudia Sheinbaum was inaugurated on October 1, 2024, and unveiled Plan Mexico in January 2025 as an industrial policy framework anchored on a Fideicomiso for nearshoring incentives, regional content thresholds, and a sharper screen on Chinese investment. Foreign direct investment closed 2024 at 36.87 billion dollars per Secretaria de Eco...
Vietnam's EV and Battery Cluster Comes of Age: VinFast at Scale, the China Question, and the 46 Percent Tariff Cliff
Hanoi has assembled the most complete EV and battery supply chain in Southeast Asia outside of mainland China. The 2026 stress test is whether VinFast can profitably reach the United States while VinES, CATL, Gotion, Samsung SDI, and LG ES navigate Section 301 reciprocal tariffs, IRA Foreign Entity of Concern rules, and a tightening Power Master Plan VIII grid envelope.
Vietnam closed 2024 with real GDP growth of 7.09 percent, nominal GDP of roughly 462 billion US dollars, and realized FDI of 25.4 billion US dollars, the highest on record (General Statistics Office of Vietnam). The EV and battery cluster is the most visible expression of that capital. VinFast launched the VF3 mini in mid 2024, broke grou...
Vietnam 2026: FDI Absorption, Dong Management, and the Real Estate Cycle
Foreign capital is still arriving in record volumes, but the State Bank of Vietnam is squeezing the dong, the bond market is convalescing from the SCB shock, and the power grid is the binding constraint on the next leg of growth.
Vietnam enters 2026 with the most crowded order book in emerging Asia: registered FDI of roughly USD 41 billion in 2025, a 6.8 percent GDP print, and an export base whose top line again brushes USD 410 billion. The composition of capital is shifting toward Korean and Singaporean electronics, with Chinese midstream supplier flows now the m...
Vietnam's 14th Party Congress: To Lam, Bamboo Diplomacy, and the Pricing of Political Continuity
The January 2027 14th National Congress will ratify a leadership transition already executed under fire. Investors should price To Lam's consolidation, the Blazing Furnace's reach into the Politburo, and a 22 to 17 ministry restructuring as one integrated macro signal.
Nguyen Phu Trong's death on 19 July 2024 ended the longest General Secretaryship since reunification and triggered the most compressed succession in Vietnamese Communist Party history. By 3 August 2024 To Lam, the Minister of Public Security who had run the Blazing Furnace anti-corruption campaign, held the General Secretaryship outright....
Vietnam Under To Lam: 14th Congress, Ministry Mergers, and the FDI Test of 2026
General Secretary To Lam inherited the party in August 2024 with a mandate to streamline the state, defend the China plus one boom, and absorb a 46 percent reciprocal tariff threat. The 14th Party Congress in January 2026 will lock in his program at the same moment that VinFast, Foxconn, LG, and Pegatron decide whether Vietnam still clears the new landed cost math.
Vietnamese GDP grew 7.09 percent in 2024, the fastest print since 2018, on registered FDI of USD 38.2 billion and realised FDI of USD 25.4 billion (GSO, MPI). The Politburo confirmed To Lam as General Secretary on August 3, 2024 after Nguyen Phu Trong's death, and on March 1, 2025 collapsed the central government from 18 ministries plus 4...