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Copper: The Metal the Future Turns On
There is a metal that rarely makes the front page, yet quietly and more profoundly changes the world than almost any other material. Copper. Not gold, not lithium, not oil. Copper. The red metal that humankind has used for more than ten thousand years, and that has once again proven indispensable to the greatest industrial transformation of our time: the shift from fossil fuels to clean energy. The copper price reached record levels in 2025 and has risen further in 2026. This


Giving That Lasts: Why the Smartest Foundations Think Like Investors
A quiet shift is under way in how foundations approach their work. Whether a foundation was established by a family, an institution, a company, a church, or in partnership with government, the same question is being asked more and more often: are we giving in a way that lasts? A new generation of donors and trustees, many of whom built or led organisations with discipline and long-term thinking, is now applying those same instincts to philanthropy. They no longer simply disbu


The quiet power of patient capital
Last week, the financial world stood once again in the sign of extremes. Gold hit a new historic peak around 4,446 dollars per ounce, US equity markets closed at record levels, and the oil price rose and then fell back in rhythm with the geopolitics around Iran. In Washington, the new chair of the Federal Reserve took the reins, while investors watched the inflation figures closely. For anyone who tracks the markets every morning, it can feel as though an enormous amount is h


Free trade, protectionism, and the investor who looks past policy
The US and China reached an agreement last week on a substantial reduction of their mutual trade tariffs. US tariffs on Chinese goods drop from 145 to 30 percent, and China lowers its retaliatory tariffs from 125 to 10 percent. Markets responded with one of the strongest weeks of the year. The S&P 500 rose more than 5 percent, and industrial stocks and commodity names were the big winners. The news is being widely viewed as a turning point — or at least a breather — in a trad


Two signals from this week that every investor should understand
This week produced two events that both deserve the attention of long-term investors: the summit between Trump and Xi Jinping in Beijing about a possible trade deal, and Moody's downgrade of the US credit rating. At first glance these look like sharply opposing signals — the first hopeful, the second worrying. But together they tell a story that hangs together more coherently than the initial market reactions suggest, and that story has direct relevance for how a thoughtful i


Lithium, critical minerals, and the investor who looks ahead
Lithium is back. After a sharp drop of more than 80 percent from its 2022 peak and two years of sector pessimism, lithium prices in 2026 have risen nearly 50 percent year-to-date. Spodumene, the hard mineral that sits at the start of the battery chain, has risen even more sharply. The causes are both structural and cyclical: strong demand from electric vehicles and large-scale energy storage, an export ban on lithium concentrate from Zimbabwe that removed a significant supply


What Earnings Reports Tell Us That the News Doesn't
Four times a year, the major listed companies report their quarterly results. This period — known as earnings season — is one of the most informative moments in the investment year. Not because the numbers themselves are so important, but because they reveal something macroeconomic forecasts and news headlines rarely can: an honest picture of how real businesses are actually performing in a specific economic climate. This week illustrated that contrast sharply. Caterpillar, t


Investing in a Slower Growth World: What Truly Matters
The IMF lowered its global growth forecast this week to 3.1% for 2026. Conflict in the Middle East, ongoing trade tensions, and persistent inflation are weighing on global economic activity. The risks are clearly tilted to the downside. For many investors, this feels like a signal to be cautious, to wait, or to sell. But history consistently shows the opposite: periods of economic uncertainty are precisely when long-term investors build positions, not reduce them. The questio


Uncertainty as the Enemy of Growth: What Trade Tensions Really Cost
April 2026 began with a shock. The so-called fear index of the U.S. equity market reached its third-highest level ever recorded in the first week of April, surpassed only by the peaks during the COVID-19 pandemic and the global financial crisis of 2008. Markets declined sharply, investors repositioned en masse, and major financial institutions began revising their growth expectations downward. But what is really driving this unrest? The answer does not lie in a single event,


When Money Becomes More Expensive
Something is currently unfolding in the global financial markets that is receiving little attention in the daily news cycle, yet has far-reaching consequences for anyone who saves, invests, or has a loan. Government bond yields are rising sharply, and this is not a technical detail for specialists. It is a signal that the price of money is changing, and with that change, many things in the economy are shifting. To understand this, a brief explanation helps. Governments borrow


Why Oil Prices Still Matter for the Global Economy
Oil prices remain one of the most important drivers of the global economy, even though technology companies and interest rate movements often dominate financial headlines today. When oil prices rise suddenly, financial markets usually react quickly. The reason is simple: energy still plays a central role in almost every economic activity. Oil is not only important as fuel. It is also essential for transportation, manufacturing, and logistics. When oil prices increase, it beco


How Wars Historically Affect Stock Markets
When geopolitical tensions rise or a conflict breaks out, financial markets often react immediately. Prices suddenly move, oil prices rise, and investors temporarily seek safety in gold or government bonds. Yet history shows that wars often have a less lasting impact on stock markets than initially expected. The first reaction of the market is usually based on uncertainty. As soon as a conflict erupts, investors try to assess the possible economic consequences. This often lea


Uncertainty Is Not an Enemy
Political tensions, trade conflicts, and central banks adjusting their course create the feeling that the economic rules of the game are constantly changing. Uncertainty seems to be a permanent part of the landscape. Yet uncertainty itself is not a new phenomenon. Financial markets have historically always been shaped by periods of ambiguity. Wars, oil crises, recessions, waves of inflation, and technological revolutions have followed one another. And each time, companies ada


Why ‘Real Assets’ Are Quietly Making a Comeback
After years in which financial markets were dominated by technology, growth narratives, and digital concepts, a gradual shift is becoming visible. Increasingly, attention is turning toward tangible, productive assets. Think of energy, infrastructure, commodities, farmland, and economically functional real estate. These so-called real assets are quietly making a comeback. This development is no coincidence. The global economy has entered a phase in which supply security, strat


When Enthusiasm Becomes Dangerous
Commodities have long remained out of the spotlight. While equity markets reached new highs, interest in metals like gold, silver, and copper was relatively muted. That phase now seems to be over. Rising prices are drawing renewed attention, and commodities are increasingly featured in headlines and investor conversations. This isn’t surprising in itself. Commodities move in long cycles. Periods of low prices lead to reduced investment. When demand picks up again, shortages a


Why Good Companies Are Sometimes Bad Stocks (and Vice Versa)
A lot of attention on the stock market goes to good companies; businesses with strong brands, recognizable products, growing revenues, and a compelling story. Yet in practice, these very companies often disappoint investors. Not because the company is failing, but simply because the stock was too expensive at the time of purchase. That distinction is often underestimated: a good company is not automatically a good investment. The difference almost always lies in the price and


Oil is back in the spotlight – but the real story is a long-term one
The oil market is once again drawing attention. This time, it's not due to a surprise production cut from OPEC, tensions in the Middle East, or a sudden demand spike from China; but because of Venezuela. After years of political and economic instability, the country with one of the world's largest proven oil reserves is suddenly back in the spotlight. Even retail investors seem to have rediscovered oil as a theme. The excitement is understandable. The idea that Venezuela’s re


Uncertainty Is Not the Enemy of the Investor
Uncertainty is once again dominating financial headlines. News of cooling economic growth, rising unemployment, and a central bank seeking the right balance between inflation and growth is pouring in rapidly. For many investors, this feels unsettling. Yet it’s important not to equate uncertainty with danger. Financial markets rarely move in straight lines. Periods of calm and predictability are almost always followed by phases of doubt and volatility. These are often the mome


The Shiny Surface of Technology and the Reality Behind It
Technology companies have succeeded for years in attracting attention. New projects are often announced with grand language, accompanied by compelling visions of the future and impressive figures. To outsiders, it seems the world is constantly on the verge of a radical transformation. But behind the shine sometimes lies a reality that is far less spectacular than the story being presented. A recent example is the strategic shift at Meta . A few years ago, the metaverse was in


Between Euphoria and Reality
Financial markets rarely move in a straight line. Periods of euphoria alternate with moments of fear and disappointment. The tendency to believe that “this time is different” remains persistent. Yet history repeatedly shows that bubbles can form anywhere, even when everything looks rosy. The dot-com era at the end of the 1990s is a classic example. Technology companies were richly valued based on dreams instead of profits. The belief that the internet would rewrite all econom
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