Gulf States Reportedly Review US Ties and Withdraw Investments Amid Economic Strain from Iran Conflict

By: Marcus Alexander

In a potential seismic shift in Middle Eastern geopolitics, major Gulf economies are reportedly considering withdrawing from contracts with the United States and reviewing future investment commitments to alleviate economic strain from the ongoing war with Iran.

The claims, which originated in a post on X by user Sulaiman Ahmed, suggest that Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, and Qatar are discussing measures to reduce their financial exposure to the U.S. economy. According to the post, which cites an anonymous official, the move is a direct response to “the economic strain imposed upon them by the Iran war.

These assertions are supported by a report published by Reuters on March 5, 2026, citing the Financial Times. The report confirms that Gulf states are indeed considering invoking force majeure clauses in current contracts and reviewing investment pledges made to the United States.

The decision appears to stem from a combination of reduced revenues and increased spending. The anonymous official cited in the original post noted that these countries face budget strains due to “reduced income from energy… the slowdown in output or the inability to ship,” as well as hits to the tourism and aviation sectors and a spike in defense spending.

This context is validated by broader economic analysis. JPMorgan recently trimmed its 2026 non-oil growth outlook for Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) economies, pointing to rising regional risks following the latest escalation between the U.S., Israel, and Iran.

Strategists noted that economic life slowed sharply in major hubs like Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Doha, raising near-term downside risks for services and broader non-oil activity.

Similarly, Fitch Ratings warned that while Gulf sovereigns can weather a short conflict, prolonged fighting or damage to energy infrastructure could threaten credit ratings. The agency noted that the Strait of Hormuz is effectively closed due to security threats, impacting energy exports.

Force Majeure and the Legal Context

The mention of “force majeure” is significant. A force majeure clause is a contractual provision that allows parties to be released from their obligations when extraordinary events beyond their control occur.

According to legal analysis from Aqran Vijandran Advocates & Solicitors, recent developments in the Middle East have placed force majeure at the centre of commercial contracts again, much like during the COVID-19 pandemic. Companies like QatarEnergy and Aluminium Bahrain have reportedly already invoked force majeure in response to the conflict.

Impact on US Relations and Global Investments

The financial stakes are immense. The original post correctly notes that these nations manage some of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds and, following President Donald Trump’s visit to the region last year, pledged hundreds of billions of dollars in U.S. investments. A review of these commitments would likely catch the attention of the White House.

An adviser to a Gulf government, cited in the original text, confirmed that the prospect of such a review has already raised concerns in Washington. The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace observed that the Gulf states are confronting the limits of their ability to spend their way to influence at the White House, noting that President Trump appears unwilling to reshape his war-forward outlook despite Gulf opposition.

The potential redirection of Gulf capital extends beyond the United States. According to Semafor, the Middle East crisis risks upending burgeoning Gulf-Africa ties. Gulf nations have invested over $100 billion in Africa across energy, ports, and tech sectors, serving as a counterweight to Western and Chinese influence. However, sovereign wealth funds that have been pouring money into African projects may now redirect their attention and capital toward immediate domestic priorities and defense.

While the initial X post by Sulaiman Ahmed brought attention to the matter, the narrative is now backed by reports from major financial news outlets. Gulf states find themselves in an increasingly untenable position, caught between Iran’s retaliatory strikes and their security alliance with the U.S.

As budget strains mount and civilian infrastructure comes under fire, the wealthy Gulf monarchies appear to be considering economic self-preservation measures that could fundamentally alter their relationship with the United States and the global economy

Via https://www.facebook.com/groups/1021186047913052/

Wall Street Journal: Oil Prices Could Surpass $215 a Barrel

Antikor
Oil prices could soar to approximately $215 per barrel — a level it has never reached when adjusted for inflation, reports The Wall Street Journal.

As the publication notes, such a scenario is feasible if the Strait of Hormuz turns out to be blocked for transporting oil from the Middle East for a prolonged period.

More information on the Antikor portal: https://antikor.info/en/articles/825301-wsj_prognoziruet_rekordnye_215_dollarov_za_barrelj_pri_blokade_ormuzskogo_proliva

Arizona Senate Advances Bill Requiring Vaccine History Review in Sudden Infant Death Investigations

Mar 04, 2026

The Arizona Senate has advanced legislation that would embed into state law a mandatory review of recent vaccinations and other pharmaceutical countermeasures in every case of sudden and unexplained infant death.

The move comes as U.S. Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) has pushed federal legislation aimed at removing legal liability protections for vaccine manufacturers, arguing that drug makers should be held accountable in civil courts when their products cause harm.

Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) is the sudden, unexplained death of an otherwise apparently healthy sleeping infant.

Many parents, doctors, and researchers suspect a vaccine role in SIDS, while official and mainstream bodies that have documented financial relationships or partnerships with pharmaceutical interests claim that current data do not support a causal link.

Data from the CDC’s Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) confirm 2,709,593 adverse events linked to vaccines since 1990, though a Harvard Pilgrim Health Care study conducted by the Harvard Medical School Department of Population Medicine found that fewer than 1% of vaccine adverse events are ever reported to VAERS, suggesting the system captures only a small fraction of total events.

The legislative move would standardize investigative transparency, ensure recent medical interventions are formally examined, and create a documented record that could increase data visibility and accountability surrounding infant death investigations.

Senate Bill 1011 (SB 1011) was introduced by Republican State Senator Janae Shamp (District 29) in January.

A registered nurse and former Majority Leader, Sen. Shamp is Vice-Chairman of the Military Affairs and Border Security committee and is a member of the Health and Human Services committee and the Natural Resources committee.

Yesterday, the measure received a “Do Pass” recommendation from the Senate Committee of the Whole.

The bill now awaits a final Third Reading vote by Senate members (who can be contacted here) before potentially moving to the Arizona House of Representatives.

SB 1011 amends Arizona Revised Statutes § 11-597 (the statute governing county medical examiners and autopsies) and inserts the following mandatory language:

“IN CASES OF A SUDDEN AND UNEXPLAINED INFANT DEATH, THE MEDICAL EXAMINER OR FORENSIC PATHOLOGIST SHALL REVIEW THE INFANT’S IMMUNIZATION AND VACCINATION HISTORY AND ANY COUNTERMEASURES THAT WERE ADMINISTERED IN THE NINETY DAYS BEFORE THE INFANT’S DEATH.”

The bill further requires:

“THE MEDICAL EXAMINER OR FORENSIC PATHOLOGIST SHALL REPORT ALL SUDDEN AND UNEXPLAINED INFANT DEATHS TO A NATIONAL CASE REGISTRY THAT RECORDS SUDDEN UNEXPECTED INFANT DEATHS AND SUDDEN DEATH IN THE YOUNG IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE UNITED STATES CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION PROTOCOLS.”

What the Amendment Changes

Current Arizona statute requires autopsies in sudden and unexplained infant death cases.

However, it does not explicitly mandate a defined 90-day review window for vaccinations or pharmaceutical countermeasures, nor does it codify reporting to a national CDC-aligned registry.

SB 1011 would make both requirements statutory.

According to the official Senate Fact Sheet, the bill:

“Requires a county medical examiner or forensic pathologist to review an infant’s immunization and vaccination history in the case of sudden and unexplained infant death.”

The Fact Sheet also confirms:

“Requires a county medical examiner or forensic pathologist, in cases of a sudden and unexplained infant death, to review the infant’s immunization and vaccination history and any countermeasures administered in the 90 days before the infant’s death.”

And:

“Requires the medical examiner or forensic pathologist to report all sudden and unexplained infant deaths to a national case registry that records sudden and unexplained infant deaths and sudden death in the young in accordance with CDC protocols.”

Why This Is Structurally Significant

By placing the vaccine and countermeasure review directly into statute using the word “shall,” the bill removes discretion around whether recent pharmaceutical exposure is examined in these investigations.

Instead of relying on variable local practice, review becomes mandatory statewide.

The amendment does three concrete things:

  1. Embeds review of recent vaccinations and countermeasures into law.
  2. Standardizes documentation in sudden infant death investigations.
  3. Feeds those cases into a national registry operating under CDC protocols.

Because the requirement is statutory, recent pharmaceutical exposures must be examined and documented in the official forensic record in every qualifying case.

National Context & ‘Unknown Causes’

The Senate Fact Sheet notes:

“In 2022, there were about 3,700 sudden unexpected infant death cases in the United States, including 1,529 deaths from SIDS, 1,131 deaths from unknown causes and 1,040 deaths from accidental suffocation and strangulation in bed.”

Legislative Status

SB 1011 has advanced through:

  • Senate Health and Human Services Committee (4–3 vote)
  • Senate Rules Committee
  • Majority and Minority Caucus “Do Pass” recommendations
  • Senate Committee of the Whole (“Do Pass” on March 2)

It now awaits a final Senate Third Reading vote before crossing to the House.

Broader Implications

The bill does not create new criminal penalties or change liability standards.

It modifies investigative procedure.

If enacted, Arizona law would require that recent immunizations and countermeasures administered within 90 days be formally reviewed and recorded in every sudden and unexplained infant death investigation statewide.

That statutory requirement increases investigative transparency, standardizes documentation, and ensures that pharmaceutical exposure is part of the formal forensic review rather than left to discretionary practice.

Bottom Line

If enacted, Arizona would become one of the first states to legally require that recent vaccines and pharmaceutical countermeasures be formally examined and recorded in every sudden unexplained infant death—moving the review of medical exposure from optional practice to mandatory law and locking transparency into the investigative process.

[…]

Via https://jonfleetwood.substack.com/p/arizona-senate-advances-bill-requiring?triedRedirect=true&_src_ref=97h25.r.sp1-brevo.net

How Italy Being Dragged into War Against Iran

By Manlio Dinucci

Contrary to what the Italian Government says, the United States does not need authorisation from the Italian Government or Italian Parliament regarding the use of its bases in Italy. In fact, it has complete freedom to use them as it wishes. By using Sigonella as an intelligence centre for the war against Iran, the United States is protecting itself, but is also dragging Italy into the war and exposing it to the risk of being targeted.

[…]

Meloni’s stance on US bases in Italy

Regarding the use of these bases, Prime Minister Georgia Meloni assured that “we are complying with the 1954 bilateral agreements”. She then clarified: “In Italy, we have three military bases granted to the Americans under agreements dating back to 1954, which have always been updated.” We therefore request that the Prime Minister show Parliament and the media the texts of the 1954 bilateral agreements between Italy and the United States, as well as any subsequent updates. This will not be easy, as these agreements are covered by military secrecy in their entirety. Regarding Meloni’s statement that “in Italy, we have three military bases granted to the Americans”, she should explain the following facts to Parliament and the media.

According to the official Pentagon Base Structure Report, the US Armed Forces own more than 1,500 buildings in Italy, with a total surface area of over 1 million square metres, and lease or have concessions for another 800 buildings, with a surface area of approximately 900,000 square metres. That’s a total of over 2,300 buildings with a surface area of approximately 2 million square metres, spread across some fifty sites. But this is only part of the US military presence in Italy.

In addition to US military bases, there are NATO bases under US command and Italian bases available to US/NATO forces. It is estimated that there are over a hundred in total. The entire network of military bases in Italy is, directly or indirectly, under the command of the Pentagon. It falls within the “area of responsibility” of the United States European Command, headed by a US general who also holds the position of Supreme Allied Commander in Europe. In other words, the United States does not need any authorisation from the Italian government or Parliament to use this network of bases, but has complete freedom to use it whenever and however it wants.

With the US base in Sigonella, Italy is being dragged into the war against Iran

This is confirmed by the United States’ use of the Sigonella base in Sicily. The Naval Air Station (NAS) Sigonella, with a staff of about 7,000 military and civilian personnel, is the largest US and NATO naval and air base in the Mediterranean region. In addition to providing logistical support to the US Sixth Fleet, it is the launch base for covert military operations mainly, but not exclusively, in the Middle East and Africa. The NAS – according to the official presentation – “houses US and NATO aircraft of all types”.

These include spy drones, capable of flying without refuelling for over 16,000 kilometres, which carry out missions from Sigonella to the Middle East, Africa, eastern Ukraine, the Black Sea and other areas. Drones armed with missiles and satellite-guided bombs also take off from Sigonella for targeted (always secret) attacks. The Naval Air Station Sigonella is complemented by the Italian base in Augusta, which supplies fuel and ammunition to US and NATO naval units, and by the port of Catania, which can accommodate up to nine warships.

The Sigonella base is connected to the MUOS station in Niscemi (Caltanissetta): a very high frequency military satellite communications system consisting of four satellites and four ground stations: two in the United States, in Virginia and Hawaii, one in Australia and one in Sicily, each equipped with three large parabolic antennas 18 metres in diameter. This system allows the Pentagon to connect submarines and warships, fighter-bombers and drones, military vehicles and ground units to a single command and communications network while they are on the move anywhere in the world.

Italmilradar, a website specialised in tracking military flights, reports based on radar tracks: “In recent days, several US Navy MQ-4C Triton surveillance drones have been spotted flying to and from the Sigonella military airbase, operating over the Eastern Mediterranean and heading towards areas closer to the Persian Gulf. Normally, when Tritons are engaged in monitoring the Gulf region, they are deployed on the front line at bases in the United Arab Emirates, particularly in Abu Dhabi.

From there, the drones can conduct ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance) missions over the Strait of Hormuz, the Gulf of Oman and the Northern Arabian Sea.

Using the Tritons from Sigonella increases the distance from operational areas, but provides a safer and more politically stable launch base. By keeping the drones in Sicily, the US Navy can reduce the risk to its ISR infrastructure. Sigonella has long been a central hub for US and NATO intelligence operations in the Mediterranean.

In the current crisis, Sigonella appears to be playing an even more important role, serving as a rear but highly capable ISR platform in support of operations extending from the eastern Mediterranean to the Gulf. The meaning is clear: by using Sigonella as an intelligence centre for the war against Iran, the United States is keeping itself safe, but in fact dragging Italy into the war and exposing it to the risk of being hit. 

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/the-horizon-the-war/5918374

Iran’s latest move in Gulf states stroke of genius

Colorful Political Map of Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Countries with ...

By Martin Jay | Strategic Culture Foundation | March 9, 2026

After just a week into Donald Trump’s war, there is very little to report which should or could please the U.S. president. Much of America’s infrastructure in the Middle East has been destroyed with U.S. soldiers now housed by hotels in Gulf states as there is nothing left of their bases. The stocks that these countries have as part of their air defence systems is almost depleted as military chiefs argue about how quickly they can be replaced (some THAAD and Patriot systems are being shipped from Japan and South Korea) and Iran is hitting Israel harder and harder each day.

Of course, due to the new draconian rules which Israel has imposed — that no military strikes that Iran succeeds in carrying out can be ‘reported’ on by journalists or even citizens who wish to post it on social media — as well as the comically corrupt, partisan way U.S. news outlets are covering the war, very little bad news gets seen by the public, if any.

Under this set up, it is hardly surprising that Trump went to war, given that he must have factored in a great deal of support from U.S. media, whom he claims to despise. In this regard, we can conclude that media itself is complicit in war crimes, given that it has played a huge role in the decision to go to war and also the day to day reporting of events on the ground.

A good example of the few points of the war which are reported, but done in such a distorted way, is the news that Iran has stopped its bombing of GCC Gulf states. This has been presented as a victory by the U.S. and a climb down by Iran. The truth though is that it is a considerable victory for Tehran as what is not being reported or even examined is the deal that Iran has struck with those countries.

None of those countries will allow any kind of military activity now by U.S. forces there, which means the thousands of U.S. soldiers in hotels in these GCC Gulf states might as well head back home as their role there is redundant. Of course it’s unlikely that Trump will move them out as such an event will be captured by many on social media and will look like a great defeat. But some analysts are going further and speculating that there is more bad news for Israel and the U.S. with this latest move. Not only has Iran insisted on no activity at all in these countries by U.S. forces but they have also said that when the war is over, all the bases must be completely shut down.

Sadly, the gesture didn’t hold for long as it is rumoured that Iran’s elite guard was angered by Trump’s response and so the missile attack on the Gulf states continued.

Against a backdrop of rumours spreading throughout the middle east that Saudi Arabia, UAE and Qatar were considering jointly to completely pull out their investment in the U.S., this move, even as a gesture, couldn’t have come at a worse time for Trump.

His media machine is working overtime in spewing out so many fake news reports, like the recent one that the U.S. has total air superiority over Iran, that it will be interesting to see how this is spun in the coming days. But there is nothing but lies from the Trump camp and as a complicit western media scrum is happy to pump out these lies, people are obviously turning to social media or international news channels in the global south, like CGTN and Russia Today.

For many Americans, they are simply too dumb to know how to even question the narrative. Where is the video footage to support these preposterous claims that American has air superiority over Iran? Within 24 hours of Trumps B2 bombers hitting nuclear sites in Iran last year in June, media were given video clips of the satellite imagery. So far, the claims by Trump’s people about air superiority, have not been matched with any evidence. None the less U.S. media reports it more or less like it is fact.

It’s a similar story with the claims about the U.S. navy sinking 20 Iranian vessels. Where’s the evidence? If we are to take into account completely defenceless ships like the unarmed frigate that was sunk in international waters after it returned from a joint exercise with India, it would seem that America is on the losing side. Not even Japanese naval strikes in the WWII would blow up enemies’ ships and not then pick up survivors. The Americans left 80 sailors to drown, the same seamen who posed with photos days earlier with Prime Minister Modi, who, it should be pointed out often claims that India is the “guardian of the Indian ocean”, a patently absurd claim. Many believe Modi sold the Iranians out and disclosed its position to the Americans, leaving many to question just how much he can be trusted with his present allies. Will Russia still sell its oil to India after such a betrayal?

It’s clear that the Iran war is already WWIII in many respects. Certainly each side has its partners and media have made much of Russia’s intelligence support to Iran pointing out American positions, while China has given Iran considerable military support both in state of the art radar systems and ground to air missile systems. The sinking of the Iranian ship shows us all the depth of the desperation of America, that it needs to go as far as hunting for Iranian ships thousands of miles away and sinking them, even if they are unarmed as this ship was. Does that look like the act of a confident aggressor on a victory role? Hardly.

It isn’t just that America can barely hold the high moral ground for even a brief, ephemeral media moment, but more that the number of shocking tactical errors by Trump are piling up and having an impact. The failure to see that killing the supreme leader, who has been replaced by a hard liner who has always wanted Iran to have a nuclear deterrent, was a major act of stupidity. Nearly all U.S. wars follow the same pattern of America underestimating its enemy and overestimating its own capabilities and this one is no exception.

The move to bring the Gulf states closer to Iran and turn them against the U.S. is smart and what we could expect from Iran who has had years to prepare for this attack and has been given so many free lessons by America’s blunders — the best one being the June attack which resulted in Iran upping its game and identifying all the weak spots which needed work. The biggest miscalculation probably of all is going to war in the first place believing that regime change would be inevitable in days and therefore no longer-term plans, in terms of military stocks, need to be addressed. America is about to run out of ammo. For the Gulf states, it’s quite possible that the deal might be reinstated in the coming days as a new truth emerges from the war. While Donald Trump tells reporters on Air Force one that Iran was responsible for bombing its own school, Gulf state leaders will have to wake up to a new reality which is summed up by Henry Kissinger. “It may be dangerous to be America’s enemy, but to be America’s friend is fatal.”

[…]

Via https://alethonews.com/2026/03/09/irans-latest-move-in-the-gcc-countries-was-a-stroke-of-genius/

Blackrock Blocks Investor Withdrawals: Entire Private Credit Industry Shaking

European Business Investment

Something significant happened in global financial markets this week that received far less attention than it deserved. BlackRock — the world’s largest asset manager, overseeing more than $10 trillion in assets — blocked nearly half of the investors who requested withdrawals from its $26 billion private credit fund from getting their money back. Not because the fund had collapsed. Not because of fraud or regulatory intervention. Simply because too many people wanted out at the same time, and the fund didn’t have the liquidity to pay them all.

This is not a minor operational footnote. It is a structural warning sign about one of the fastest-growing and least-understood corners of global finance — and the reverberations are already being felt across the entire asset management industry.

What Actually Happened at BlackRock

The mechanics are straightforward, even if the implications are not. BlackRock’s private credit fund received $1.2 billion in withdrawal requests this quarter — representing 9.3% of the fund’s total assets. BlackRock capped redemptions at 5%, paid out $620 million, and locked the remaining requests. In plain terms: almost half the investors who wanted their money back were told to wait.

Simultaneously, BlackRock wrote down a separate $25 million loan to zero — a loan that had been valued at full price just three months earlier. An asset that was considered healthy at the end of last quarter is now worth nothing. That kind of overnight impairment is precisely the event that triggers the next wave of withdrawal requests, as investors who were previously comfortable begin reassessing their exposure.

The two events together — a redemption gate and a sudden write-down — paint a picture that private credit investors have long been assured could not happen. It is happening now.

BlackRock Is Not Alone

What makes this moment particularly significant is that BlackRock’s situation is not an isolated case. Across the private credit sector, the same pressure is building simultaneously. Blackstone’s equivalent fund saw a record 7.9% in redemption requests — a figure that forced the firm to raise its withdrawal cap and inject $400 million of its own capital simply to cover investor demand. When one of the world’s most sophisticated alternative asset managers has to put its own money in to cover outflows, something has changed materially in investor sentiment.

Blue Owl went further still. Rather than partially honouring redemptions or raising caps, the firm stopped honouring them altogether and replaced withdrawal requests with IOUs — a formal acknowledgment that it cannot currently meet its liquidity obligations to investors. The market responded accordingly. BlackRock’s stock dropped 5%. KKR, Carlyle, Apollo, Ares, Blue Owl, and TPG all fell between 5% and 6% on the same day. The entire private credit sector sold off in a single session — a collective repricing of risk that the market had been slow to price in.

Why Private Credit Is Structurally Vulnerable to This

To understand why this is happening, it helps to understand what private credit funds actually do. Unlike public bond markets, where debt instruments can be bought and sold on exchanges with relative ease, private credit funds make loans directly to companies — loans that are illiquid by design. They cannot be quickly sold to raise cash. They sit on the fund’s balance sheet until they mature or are repaid.

This creates a fundamental mismatch. Investors in these funds are often offered quarterly redemption windows — the ability to request their money back on a regular basis. But the underlying assets cannot be liquidated on that timetable. When withdrawal requests are modest and staggered, the mismatch is manageable. When too many investors want out at the same time — as is now happening — the fund simply does not have the cash to pay everyone, regardless of how healthy the underlying loans may be.

JPMorgan’s Bill Eigen captured the risk succinctly: “Bad news often happens all at once. The opacity and the leverage in the sector is concerning.” That opacity is central to the problem. Unlike public markets, where prices are discovered continuously and information flows freely, private credit valuations are set by the funds themselves, on their own schedules, using their own methodologies. A loan can be carried at full value one quarter and written to zero the next — with no market mechanism in between to signal the deterioration.

The Macro Backdrop Making Everything Worse

The redemption pressure hitting private credit funds is not occurring in a vacuum. It is happening against a macro backdrop that has shifted dramatically and adversely for the sector on multiple fronts simultaneously.

Oil prices are rising sharply as the Iran war escalates, adding inflationary pressure that makes rate cuts increasingly difficult to justify. The Federal Reserve, which was widely expected to begin easing policy this year, now faces an environment in which cutting rates risks reigniting inflation at precisely the wrong moment. That matters enormously for private credit, because the sector boomed during the era of cheap money and high leverage. Rate cuts off the table means refinancing pressure on the corporate borrowers that these funds lend to.

Meanwhile, AI is disrupting the software sector at a pace that is beginning to impair the revenues of companies that borrowed heavily from private credit funds during the growth years. The borrowers are under pressure. The lenders — these funds — are therefore under pressure. And now the investors in those funds are heading for the exits at the same time.

This is what a liquidity crisis in slow motion looks like before it becomes a crisis in fast forward.

What Comes Next for a $1.8 Trillion Industry

Private credit has grown from a niche corner of alternative finance into a $1.8 trillion global industry over the past decade. It expanded rapidly precisely because it offered what public markets could not: higher yields, lower volatility on paper, and steady income in a low-rate world. Institutional investors — pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, endowments — poured money in.

The question now is whether the conditions that made private credit attractive have fundamentally changed, and whether the redemption gates being erected this quarter are a temporary friction or the first visible symptom of a deeper structural problem. The write-downs, the IOUs, the injections of proprietary capital to cover outflows — none of these are the behaviours of a sector operating normally.

When the biggest asset managers in the world start telling investors they cannot have their money back, the burden of proof shifts. The industry now needs to demonstrate that this is a manageable liquidity event rather than the leading edge of something larger. Given the opacity of the sector, the leverage within it, and the macro environment pressing in from every direction, that is a case that will be increasingly difficult to make.


FAQ

Q: Why is BlackRock blocking investor withdrawals from its private credit fund? BlackRock received withdrawal requests totalling 9.3% of its $26 billion private credit fund in a single quarter — more than its liquidity position could support. Because private credit funds hold illiquid loans that cannot be quickly sold, they impose redemption caps to manage outflows. BlackRock capped withdrawals at 5%, paid out $620 million, and locked the remainder. This is not unique to BlackRock: Blackstone has seen record redemption requests and Blue Owl has replaced withdrawal requests with IOUs entirely.

Q: Is the private credit industry heading for a systemic crisis? The simultaneous appearance of redemption gates, loan write-downs, and falling share prices across multiple major private credit managers suggests the sector is under genuine stress rather than isolated pressure at a single firm. With $1.8 trillion in assets, rising oil prices, rate cuts off the table, and AI disrupting the corporate borrowers these funds lend to, the macro environment has turned materially adverse. Whether this remains a liquidity management challenge or escalates into a broader crisis will depend on how quickly investor sentiment deteriorates and whether further write-downs materialise across the sector.

[…]

Via https://europeanbusinessmagazine.com/business/blackrock-just-told-investors-they-cant-have-their-money-back-and-the-entire-private-credit-industry-is-shaking/

Kurds don’t ‘trust’ US to back them against Iran

Kurds do not ‘trust’ US to back them against Iran – Axios

RT

Iraq’s Kurds are against joining the US attacks on Iran, and have voiced concerns about being left facing Iranian retaliation with no ground or air defense support, Axios reported on Saturday.

The CIA began working to arm Kurdish forces hostile to the Islamic Republic after the US and Israel launched strikes on Iran last Saturday, according to CNN. While US President Donald Trump initially voiced support for Kurds getting involved in the conflict, he backpedaled on the idea on Saturday.

“The Kurds must not be the tip of the spear in this conflict,” Axios wrote, citing a senior official from the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), a semi-autonomous region in northeastern Iraq.

The Iraqi Kurds are “staying neutral” as “there is no clarity” for them on whether Washington is aiming for a full regime change in Iran or just a “change in personnel,” the KRG official reportedly said. Trump has stated that the US will be involved in deciding who leads Iran in the future but has not elaborated on how this would work.

According to Axios, the Kurdish regional forces don’t think regime change as possible without Washington deploying a ground invasion, and they don’t see the US putting boots on the ground.

Israel has been far more aggressive both in the conflict and in “pushing Iranian Kurds” to join the fray, the KRG official reportedly said.

“In the past, two major uprisings were not supported” by the US, the outlet wrote, citing Amir Karimi, co-chair of the Kurdistan Free Life Party, the Iranian wing of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party. Widespread Western-backed protests wracked Iran in 2022-2023 and earlier this year, yet failed to unseat the leadership in Tehran.

In part, Kurds are staying back due to fears that the US will abandon them again, Axios cited another Kurdish official as saying.

The regional Kurdish forces in Syria served as the main US proxy against the Islamic State during the country’s brutal civil war, which ended with the ouster of Bashar Assad by Ahmed al-Sharaa – a former Al-Qaeda-linked militant leader.

Rapprochement between the US and the new government in Damascus has left the Kurds with no military support in multiple bloody clashes with the new government forces.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/634187-kurds-no-trust-us-iran/

Is Russia Feeding Tehran real‑time coordinates for American warships, aircraft and bases?

Hindustan Times

From Moscow, Sergey Lavrov vows Russia will “do everything” at the UN to stop Western operations, even as U.S. intel says Putin’s spies are quietly feeding Tehran real‑time coordinates for American warships, aircraft and bases across the Middle East. Washington officials say Iran’s strikes on radars, command posts, a CIA station in Riyadh and U.S. troops in Kuwait suddenly look far more precise, while the Pentagon burns through “years’ worth” of munitions in days. Yet Pete Hegseth insists there is “no shortage” of weapons and vows the U.S. can fight “as long as we need to.”

Iran Launches Strike on Strategic Israeli Base

Prof. Jiang Xueqin

Iran Launches Strike on Strategic Israeli Base | Prof. Jiang Xueqin Geopolitical Analysis Tensions in the Middle East have reached a dangerous new level as Iran launches missile and drone strikes targeting strategic Israeli military sites. The attack is part of a broader escalation following joint U.S.–Israeli strikes on Iranian military and leadership targets, triggering a cycle of retaliation across the region.

In response to earlier attacks on Iranian facilities and leadership compounds, Iran launched waves of ballistic missiles and drones toward Israel and several U.S. military positions in the region, signaling a major expansion of the conflict.

In this video, Professor Jiang Xueqin breaks down the strategic significance of these strikes and explains how they fit into the larger geopolitical confrontation between Iran, Israel, and their allies. Using game theory, military strategy, and predictive history, Jiang explores why attacks on strategic military bases can dramatically shift the balance of power in a regional war. In this analysis you’ll learn:

• Why Iran targeted key Israeli military bases • The strategic role of missile and drone warfare in modern conflicts

• How the Iran–Israel confrontation could expand into a regional war • The military and geopolitical consequences of escalating retaliation

• What this conflict means for global stability and energy security Through careful geopolitical analysis, Professor Jiang explains how a single strike on a strategic base can trigger a wider conflict involving multiple countries across the Middle East.