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Analysis

Pakistan’s Economic Growth: Resilience Amid Challenges

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Pakistan’s Economic Survey for FY2025–26, presented by Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb in June, recorded GDP growth of 3.7%, the fastest pace in four years and above the prior year’s 3.18%, though still short of the government’s 4.2% target (Dawn). The KSE-100 index climbed 18.4% in the July–March period, public debt-to-GDP fell to 68.5% from 75% in 2023, and the fiscal deficit narrowed to 0.7% of GDP. Yet the IMF’s own July update projects Pakistan will miss its FY27 growth target too, holding its 3.6% 2026 estimate broadly unchanged from April (ProPakistani).

The Headline Resilience Story Most Coverage Repeats

Local press has largely framed the survey as a story of “resilience and discipline,” pointing to reserves built through the IMF’s Extended Fund Facility, a primary surplus, and Naya Pakistan Certificate inflows of $2 billion contributing to $6.1 billion in external budgetary disbursements (Dawn). That framing is accurate but incomplete.

What the IMF Country Report Actually Flags

The Fund’s most recent Article IV-linked staff report highlights a structural vulnerability that has received far less attention: Pakistan’s remittance dependence on the Gulf Cooperation Council. Remittances account for roughly 9% of GDP, and 55% of that flow originates in GCC states. The report warns explicitly that a significant disruption to Gulf economies, or a return migration of Pakistani workers, “could weigh on these flows, a major source of financing for consumption and the balance of payments” (IMF Country Report 26/101). With GCC banks also Pakistan’s primary source of short-term commercial financing, any deterioration in regional risk sentiment tied to the Iran war threatens both sides of the external accounts simultaneously.

Inflation Is Not as Tame as the Growth Number Suggests

Core inflation stood at 7.6% year-on-year in March, and headline inflation rose to 7.3% as higher commodity prices began passing through to domestic energy costs — a direct transmission channel from the Strait of Hormuz disruption. The State Bank of Pakistan held its policy rate at 10.5% through January and March after a 50-basis-point cut in December, while projecting reserves to climb to roughly $18 billion by June 2026, contingent on continued IMF program access (IMF Country Report 26/101).

The FY27 Revenue Gap

Achieving Pakistan’s FY27 fiscal target requires additional revenue measures worth 0.6% of GDP, according to the Fund, to correct chronically low tax buoyancy. An FBR revenue collection floor is proposed as a quantitative performance criterion from December 2026, alongside provincial efforts to broaden the GST base on services — reforms that carry real political cost in an economy still recovering from last year’s floods, which nonetheless pushed FY26 H1 growth to 3.8% on the back of autos, construction and garments.

Why This Is the Uncovered Story

Most business coverage of Pakistan’s economy treats the growth and inflation numbers in isolation from the geopolitical risk running through the Gulf. The IMF’s own modelling shows the adverse Iran-war scenario could add up to 1.5 percentage points of cumulative GDP damage by FY27, with the current account deficit and inflation impact both roughly doubling relative to a pre-conflict baseline. That is the number that determines whether Islamabad’s hard-won reserve buffer holds — not the headline growth print alone.


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Analysis

Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s AI Rate Bet 2026: Inside the FOMC Split on Productivity vs Inflation

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Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh, sworn in on May 22, 2026, used his first appearance at the European Central Bank’s Sintra forum to tie the future of US interest-rate policy explicitly to a single question: whether the artificial intelligence capital-expenditure wave will eventually translate into real productivity gains (24/7 Wall St.). “We’re all in the price stability business,” Warsh told the forum, adding that officials had grown more open-minded about AI’s disinflationary potential even as current prices remain too high (CNBC).

The Data Behind Warsh’s Bet

The numbers Warsh is watching are stark: Q1 2026 private investment surged 7.9% while consumer spending crawled at just 0.5%, meaning corporate capital expenditure — not household demand — is now the dominant engine of US GDP growth. Domestic nonfinancial corporate profits hit $2.97 trillion in the first quarter, with the information sector alone contributing $352.5 billion, up from $265 billion two years earlier (24/7 Wall St.).

A Genuine Split on the FOMC

Not everyone on the Federal Open Market Committee shares Warsh’s optimism. New York Fed President John Williams has cited AI-related spending as a persistent source of demand that could eventually force the central bank toward rate hikes rather than cuts — the opposite conclusion from Warsh’s own framing (Moneywise). Minutes from the June meeting, Warsh’s first as chair, showed heightened committee-wide awareness of inflation risk tied both to the Iran war’s disruption of oil shipping and to lingering tariffs.

The $700 Billion Number That Complicates the Story

Quartz’s analysis frames the tension precisely: Warsh arrived in the role with a case for lower rates built on an AI productivity story, only to confront a roughly $700 billion AI spending blitz from hyperscalers that is, for now, showing up overwhelmingly on the demand side of the economy rather than the supply side he is banking on (Quartz). Markets are already pricing in the possibility of one rate hike by October — a scenario few analysts anticipated when Warsh took office pledging a fresh, less-predictive approach to Fed communication.

Inflation Has Not Cooperated

Personal Consumption Expenditures inflation hit 4.1% in May, with core inflation at 3.4%, prompting some analysts to describe Warsh’s tenure as marking a “hawkish turn” that has caught investors off guard after years of expectations for near-term easing (Intellectia). The federal funds rate has been held at 3.50–3.75% for four consecutive meetings spanning both the Powell and Warsh chairmanships.

Why This Matters Well Beyond Wall Street

Warsh’s framing — that AI represents “the first or second inning” of a productivity revolution comparable to the internet’s creation of entirely new job categories — is not merely rhetorical. If the Fed holds or cuts rates based on an AI productivity bet that fails to materialise on schedule, the resulting policy error would ripple through every economy whose currency, borrowing costs and capital flows are benchmarked against the dollar, from the Bank of England’s own rate path to emerging-market central banks in Pakistan and Indonesia currently managing their own inflation dynamics.

The Next Test

The FOMC’s July 28–29 meeting is, per multiple analysts, the pivotal near-term data point — the first real signal of whether Warsh’s productivity bet or Williams’s demand-side inflation concern is shaping actual policy rather than just public messaging.


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Analysis

Dubai Real Estate 2026: Inside the $5.1 Billion Ultra-Prime Boom and the Cooling Mid-Market

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Dubai recorded 296 home sales above $10 million in the first half of 2026 — a record $5.1 billion in ultra-prime transactions, according to Knight Frank data — even as the broader rental and mid-market segment continued to soften, with Abu Dhabi’s rent freeze still in place and over 18,000 units handed over in Dubai in the first five months of the year alone (Mitchell’s Commercial Realty).

The Headline Number vs. the Structural Story

Dubai’s GDP expanded 2.4% year-on-year in Q1 2026 to AED 232 billion, led by non-oil sectors including wholesale, retail, and financial and insurance services — growth that held up through the regional conflict period even as some external commentary predicted it would stall (Edwards & Towers). Total H1 property sales reached $78 billion across more than 86,000 transactions, the second-highest first-half performance on record, though still below 2025’s exceptional run (Arabian Business).

The Angle Most Property Coverage Misses: This Isn’t the 2008 Cycle

A single data point captures why this cycle behaves differently from Dubai’s prior boom-bust pattern: only 4% of homes sold in Dubai last year were resold within 12 months of purchase, compared with 25% during the 2008 cycle, according to market data reported by Edwards & Towers (Edwards & Towers). That shift from short-term flipping toward end-user and long-term investor ownership is the single most important structural difference between today’s market and the speculative excess that preceded the global financial crisis.

Foreign Capital Is Flowing In, Not Out

Foreign investment in Dubai real estate rose 26% to $40.4 billion in the first half of 2026, while luxury real estate investment specifically increased 26% to $23.9 billion (Arabian Business). The UAE’s 2025 foreign direct investment reached a record AED 177.3 billion ($48.3 billion), placing the country among the world’s top ten FDI destinations — a base that is cushioning the property sector’s adjustment even as Q2 saw three consecutive months of price declines in the broader residential segment (Mitchell’s Commercial Realty).

Oil Output Hit a Record, and Technology Access Just Expanded

UAE crude output reached an all-time high of 4.1 million barrels per day in June, even as Dubai’s own growth is now overwhelmingly non-oil in composition. Separately, a US technology access upgrade now places the UAE alongside the UK, India and South Korea in terms of advanced technology availability — a shift with multi-year implications for data-centre, power infrastructure and high-income technical talent demand, rather than an immediate market catalyst (Mitchell’s Commercial Realty).

The Population Story Underpinning Demand

Dubai’s population surpassed 4 million in 2025, with a further 175,000–225,000 residents projected for 2026, driven increasingly by long-term residents and skilled migrants rather than short-term speculative buyers, according to Engel & Völkers’ market review — a demand base the IMF expects to be supported by roughly 5% UAE economic growth in 2026 (Engel & Völkers).

What to Watch for the Rest of 2026

The UAE Central Bank has forecast 9.8% economic growth for 2027, a figure that, if realised, would mark a sharp acceleration from the current cycle’s more moderate pace — and would test whether Dubai’s pipeline of over 100,000 additional announced units can be absorbed without reproducing the oversupply dynamics of prior cycles.


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Analysis

Bank of Canada 2026: Why the 0.7% Growth Cut Hides a Deeper Tariff-Adaptation Story

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The Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25% on July 15, extending a pause that began after its final cut in October 2025, while cutting its 2026 growth forecast to just 0.7% from an April projection of 1.2% — the largest single revision in the current cycle (Hashtag Investing; Bank of Canada).

Two Numbers in Tension

The downgrade sits oddly alongside a more encouraging recent trend: Statistics Canada estimates Q2 growth accelerated to roughly 2.5% annualized after a stalled first quarter, and the Bank explicitly frames the weak annual figure as reflecting front-loaded weakness rather than a deteriorating trajectory — it still projects 1.8% growth in both 2027 and 2028 (Hashtag Investing). Inflation, meanwhile, hit 3.2% in May — the highest since late 2023 — driven by the Middle East conflict’s energy shock and the Hormuz shutdown, before easing modestly as a mid-June ceasefire briefly took hold, only for hostilities to resume days later (BNN Bloomberg).

The Story Underneath: Adaptation, Not Resolution

Bloomberg’s Canada Daily newsletter captures the angle most outlets have missed: Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem’s message across the quarterly forecast round was that Canadian businesses are no longer waiting for clarity on Donald Trump’s tariffs — they are adapting to them structurally (Bloomberg). Trade within North America remains largely tariff-free under the Canada-US-Mexico Agreement, though sector-specific measures continue to bite, and CUSMA itself is now subject to annual reviews rather than the longer-term certainty businesses had previously priced in (Bank of Canada Monetary Policy Report).

A Labour Market Stuck, Not Collapsing

Canada’s unemployment rate sat at 6.5% in June, hovering in a 6.5–7% range since late 2024 — soft but stable. RBC Economics notes housing markets in Toronto and Vancouver, which had significantly underperformed the rest of the country, have begun to firm, while export growth has resumed even if on a lower long-run path than before the tariff era began (RBC Economics).

The Mortgage Renewal Wave Nobody Is Pricing Correctly

An estimated 1.5 million Canadian households have already renewed mortgages at higher rates since the pandemic-era lows, with another million expected to do so over the coming year, according to CMHC estimates cited by Hashtag Investing. Holding the policy rate at 2.25% avoids an immediate additional shock for variable-rate borrowers, but does not reverse the payment increases already locked in for those exiting ultra-low pandemic terms — a slow-moving fiscal drag on household spending that receives far less coverage than the headline rate decision itself.

The Risk the Bank Is Actually Watching

The Bank of Canada identifies two dominant risks to its forecast: the durability of the Canada-US trade relationship, and the trajectory of the Middle East conflict. Oxford Economics’ Tony Stillo frames the latter as the more acute near-term threat, warning that a re-escalation could reproduce the exact inflation dynamic the Bank was managing in May, forcing it back into a reactive posture regardless of direction (BNN Bloomberg).


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