Asia
Shanghai’s Bold Bid to Become a Global Financial Powerhouse by 2035
Shanghai’s 2035 plan to become a global financial hub leverages AI, RMB internationalization, and national backing—but faces geopolitical, demographic, and institutional challenges.
How China’s commercial capital is leveraging unprecedented national backing, AI innovation, and RMB internationalization to challenge New York, London, and Hong Kong—while navigating geopolitical headwinds and demographic realities
The Lujiazui skyline glows against the Huangpu River at dusk, its trio of supertall towers—Shanghai Tower, the World Financial Center, and Jin Mao—rising like sentinels over the Bund’s neocolonial facades. This juxtaposition of eras captures Shanghai’s perpetual dance between past and future, between China’s century of humiliation and its ambitions for the century ahead. In December 2025, as city planners presented their proposals for the 15th Five-Year Plan, that future came into sharper focus: by 2035, Shanghai aims to establish itself as a “socialist modern international metropolis with global influence,” with its Shanghai international financial center 2035 vision receiving explicit national endorsement for the first time in years.
The stakes extend far beyond municipal pride. Shanghai’s roadmap—encompassing AI-driven manufacturing, green finance, semiconductor self-sufficiency, and offshore yuan markets—represents Beijing’s most comprehensive attempt yet to build financial infrastructure capable of withstanding Western economic pressure while capturing the commanding heights of 21st-century innovation. Whether this vision succeeds or stumbles will shape not only China’s economic trajectory but the broader contest between competing models of state capitalism and liberal market economies.
National Mandate Meets Local Ambition
Shanghai’s latest planning cycle arrives at a pivotal juncture. The 15th Five-Year Plan recommendations adopted by China’s Central Committee in October 2025 explicitly identify advancing Shanghai as an international financial center as a national priority—a designation that carries both prestige and resources. This marks a notable shift from the more muted treatment in previous planning documents, reflecting Beijing’s recognition that financial power remains inseparable from technological sovereignty and geopolitical resilience.

The Shanghai 15th Five-Year Plan financial ambitions center on what local officials call the “Five Centers” strategy: positioning the city as the preeminent hub for international economic activity, finance, trade, shipping, and science-technology innovation. Published in January 2026, the detailed recommendations outline concrete targets across each pillar. The plan sets a long-term objective of doubling Shanghai’s per capita GDP from 2020 levels to approximately 313,600 yuan ($45,000) by 2035—requiring sustained annual growth of roughly six percent, a challenging target given China’s broader demographic and debt headwinds.
Yet the China Shanghai financial center push is about more than numbers. Beijing views Shanghai as essential to an alternative financial architecture that reduces vulnerability to dollar-based sanctions and Western payment systems. As one analysis of the broader 15th Five-Year Plan notes, “finance must serve industry, technology and the domestic market—not become an independent driver that risks systemic vulnerability.” This philosophy distinguishes Shanghai’s model from the more freewheeling approaches of New York or London, embedding financial development within broader industrial and technological strategies rather than treating it as an end in itself.
The plan’s timing reflects careful calculation. Trump’s return to the White House in January 2025 initially triggered fears of renewed trade warfare, but by late 2025, U.S.-China relations had stabilized around managed competition rather than open confrontation. The November 2025 trade truce, extended after multiple rounds of negotiation, bought Beijing breathing room to pursue longer-term strategic objectives. Shanghai’s 2035 blueprint assumes not détente but a durable pattern of competitive coexistence—what Chinese strategists call “de-risking” rather than decoupling.
The “Five Centers” Architecture: From Global Resource Allocation to RMB Innovation
At the heart of Shanghai’s transformation lies an interconnected system designed to concentrate capital, talent, technology, and trade flows. The Shanghai global financial hub plan envisions these five pillars reinforcing one another: financial markets channeling capital to advanced manufacturers, shipping networks distributing high-value exports, and innovation clusters generating IP that can be commercialized through both domestic and offshore financing.
International Financial Center: This remains the cornerstone. Shanghai’s financial markets already command impressive scale—the Shanghai Stock Exchange ranks third globally by market capitalization, while the bond market under custody ranks first among exchange-based systems worldwide. The Shanghai Gold Exchange leads in physical gold trading, and several Shanghai Futures Exchange commodities top global volume rankings. Total annual transaction value across Shanghai’s financial markets exceeds 2,800 trillion yuan.
The 15th Five-Year Plan pushes further, calling for Shanghai to become a global renminbi asset allocation center and risk management hub. This means expanding cross-border and offshore financial services while developing sophisticated derivatives markets that allow international investors to hedge yuan exposure. The expansion of Bond Connect now permits overseas retail investors to participate, broadening RMB repatriation channels. The RMB Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) has reached over 120 countries and regions, providing alternatives to SWIFT for Belt and Road transactions.
Shanghai’s fintech ecosystem offers particular competitive advantages. Recent rankings placed Shanghai ahead of London in research and development investment, innovation outcomes, and information technology industry scale. The city has outperformed all competitors in fintech application metrics while climbing to fourth globally in fintech growth potential. Districts like Pudong specialize in financial services, Xuhui in AI foundation models and privacy computing, Huangpu in asset management and insurance tech, and Hongkou in innovative financial companies—creating a distributed yet interconnected fintech landscape.
International Trade and Shipping Center: Shanghai’s port infrastructure provides the physical backbone for its financial ambitions. The Yangshan Deep Water Port, connected to the mainland by the world’s longest sea bridge, handles over 47 million twenty-foot equivalent units annually, making Shanghai the world’s busiest container port. The plan calls for strengthening trade hub functions, accelerating innovation in trade formats, and improving global supply chain management—essentially positioning Shanghai as the node where goods, capital, and information intersect.
The Lin-gang Special Area, established within the Shanghai Free Trade Zone, exemplifies this integration. It introduced China’s first offshore RMB tax guidelines and piloted offshore trade tax incentives, while the offshore RMB bond market surpassed 600 billion yuan in value. An international reinsurance trading platform positions Shanghai as a hub for dispersing Asian catastrophe risks—a role previously dominated by Bermuda and Lloyd’s of London.
Science and Technology Innovation Center: This pillar distinguishes the Shanghai 2035 socialist metropolis vision from purely financial ambitions. The plan identifies six emerging sectors for cultivation: intelligent and hydrogen-powered vehicles, high-end equipment manufacturing, advanced materials, low-carbon industries, and fashion/consumer goods. Particular emphasis falls on quantum technology, brain-computer interfaces, controlled nuclear fusion, biomanufacturing, and mobile communications—domains where China seeks to close gaps with or leapfrog Western competitors.
Shanghai’s AI ecosystem has achieved critical mass. The Shanghai Foundation Model Innovation Center, inaugurated in September 2023, became China’s first and the world’s largest incubator dedicated to foundation models. Located in Xuhui district, it houses technology giants including the Shanghai AI Laboratory, Tencent, Alibaba, Microsoft, SenseTime, and the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Shanghai Center, plus AI startups like Infinigence, Yitu, and PAI—all within one kilometer of each other. The center features a computing power scheduling platform partnering with nine providers, and attracted over 100 billion yuan in investment funds including the 60-billion-yuan National AI Industry Investment Fund.
By 2024, Shanghai’s AI industry exceeded 450 billion yuan in total output, positioning the city as a serious contender in the global race for AI supremacy. The integration of AI across finance, manufacturing, logistics, and urban governance creates feedback loops that accelerate adoption and refinement—a dynamic that Silicon Valley pioneered but Shanghai now replicates at greater scale.
The Shanghai AI and Advanced Manufacturing Hub: Chips, Green Tech, and Industrial Modernization
Shanghai’s industrial strategy centers on building a “modern industrial system with advanced manufacturing as its backbone”—recognizing that financial power without manufacturing depth proves hollow. The city’s approach differs markedly from Western deindustrialization patterns, instead pursuing simultaneous upgrades across traditional industries and cultivation of next-generation sectors.
Semiconductor Self-Sufficiency: Few domains matter more to Beijing than chips. U.S. export controls have choked access to cutting-edge lithography equipment and advanced nodes, making domestic capability an existential priority. Shanghai hosts major fabs including Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) and plays anchor roles in both national and local semiconductor funds.
The Shanghai Science and Technology Innovation Investment Fund received a capital boost of $1 billion in September 2024, bolstering capacity to finance projects vital to China’s semiconductor self-reliance. This builds on the first phase dating to 2016, which invested billions into major foundries and equipment makers. Nationally, the China Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund Phase III established in May 2024 boasts registered capital of 344 billion yuan ($47.5 billion)—larger than the first two phases combined. Phase III focuses on large-scale manufacturing, equipment, materials, and high-bandwidth memory for AI semiconductors.
Shanghai’s chip ecosystem benefits from concentration: research institutes, fabs, equipment suppliers, and design houses cluster in Zhangjiang, Pudong, and Lin-gang, enabling rapid iteration and knowledge spillovers. While Western sanctions limit access to extreme ultraviolet lithography needed for sub-7nm nodes, Shanghai’s ecosystem excels at mature-node innovation and packaging technologies that remain crucial for automotive, industrial, and consumer electronics.
Green Finance and Low-Carbon Industries: Shanghai positions itself as the nexus for China’s climate transition. The city issued implementation plans for carbon peak and carbon neutrality, established one of the first national climate investment and financing pilots in Pudong, and operates China’s national emissions trading scheme from Shanghai. By end-2022, carbon trading quotas reached 230 million metric tons with cumulative volume of 10.48 billion yuan.
The “technology + finance” model established green technology equity investment funds to promote coordinated development. A collaborative network involving research institutions, international organizations, and leading companies develops green technologies, supported by over 1,600 experts and 119 service agencies. Shanghai rapidly advances offshore wind power and “photovoltaic+” projects while building integrated energy management platforms covering water, electricity, oil, gas, and hydrogen.
This infrastructure supports growing green bond issuance, ESG-linked lending, and climate derivatives—positioning Shanghai to capture capital flows as global investors increasingly demand sustainable assets. The Shanghai Environment and Energy Exchange provides platforms for carbon trading, green certificates, and environmental rights transactions, creating liquid markets that price externalities and allocate climate-related capital.
Manufacturing Digitalization: The plan sets an ambitious target: by 2025, all manufacturers above designated size will receive digitalization assessments, with at least 80 percent completing digital transformation. The scale of industrial internet core segments should reach 200 billion yuan. Eight municipal-level digital transformation demonstration areas have been established, with 40 smart factories under construction.
This push reflects recognition that manufacturing competitiveness increasingly depends on software, sensors, and analytics rather than just scale or labor costs. Shanghai leverages its concentrations of both industrial firms and tech companies to pioneer applications in predictive maintenance, supply chain optimization, and lights-out production. The integration of 5G networks, industrial IoT devices, and AI-powered control systems transforms factories into nodes within larger cyber-physical systems.
RMB Internationalization: Shanghai as the Offshore Yuan Anchor
Perhaps no element of the Shanghai international financial center 2035 blueprint carries greater geopolitical significance than advancing renminbi internationalization. While Hong Kong remains the largest offshore yuan hub, Shanghai serves as the onshore anchor—the deep, liquid market from which offshore activity ultimately derives.
Current State of RMB Globalization: The yuan’s international role has expanded meaningfully but remains far from displacing the dollar. By February 2025, RMB accounted for 4.33 percent of global payments by value according to SWIFT—up from negligible shares two decades ago but still dwarfed by the dollar’s roughly 40 percent share. More than 70 central banks hold yuan reserves, yet RMB constitutes only 2-3 percent of global foreign exchange reserves.
The People’s Bank of China reports that cross-border RMB receipts and payments totaled 35 trillion yuan in first-half 2025, up 14 percent year-on-year. RMB-denominated trade in goods reached 6.4 trillion yuan, accounting for 28 percent of total cross-border transactions—both record highs. As exchange rate flexibility increases, more enterprises choose RMB for settlement to hedge currency risk and reduce transaction costs.
China’s approach emphasizes gradual, trade-based internationalization rather than full capital account liberalization. The PBOC has signed bilateral currency swap agreements with over 40 foreign central banks, with 31 agreements totaling around 4.31 trillion yuan currently in force. Some have been activated by counterparty authorities (Argentina, Russia) to meet international financing needs when cut off from other funding sources—demonstrating RMB’s growing utility as a geopolitical hedge.
Shanghai’s Infrastructure for Yuan Flows: The city’s role centers on providing deep, sophisticated markets where international actors can access, deploy, and hedge yuan exposures. The Shanghai Free Trade Zone operates under a “liberalizing the first line, efficient control of the second line, and free circulation within the zone” model that enables innovation in bonds, repos, derivatives, and insurance while maintaining regulatory firewalls between onshore and offshore systems.
The expansion of financial openness includes allowing qualified non-financial groups to establish financial holding companies and participate in interbank foreign exchange markets. FinTech companies in Lin-gang push innovation in AI, big data, cloud computing, and blockchain for financial applications. Financial institutions and insurers provide long-term credit, investment funds, and direct investment for technology research, while the Shanghai Stock Exchange’s STAR Market facilitates tech company listings.
The reinsurance International Board launched at the 2024 Lujiazui Forum transforms the reinsurance market from “one-way openness” to “two-way openness”—allowing foreign reinsurers to access Chinese risk while Chinese carriers diversify internationally. This creates yuan-denominated flows in a massive global market previously dominated by Western carriers.
Blockchain and AI technologies enhance oversight of cross-border funds through a “digital regulatory sandbox” while optimizing anti-money laundering and anti-fraud systems. The goal: maintain financial stability and regulatory control while expanding yuan’s international footprint—a balancing act that distinguishes Shanghai’s model from the laissez-faire approaches of traditional offshore centers.
Petroyuan and Alternative Payment Rails: Beyond conventional financial instruments, Shanghai’s International Energy Exchange launched yuan-denominated crude oil futures in 2018, creating an alternative to dollar-based benchmarks. While still modest in global terms, petroyuan contracts provide energy exporters—particularly those facing Western sanctions—with options for settling trades outside dollar systems.
The Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS), headquartered in Shanghai, processes daily RMB transactions reaching $60 billion as of 2025—still far behind SWIFT’s dollar volumes but growing steadily. CIPS provides critical infrastructure for Belt and Road transactions and offers sanctioned entities alternatives to Western-controlled payment networks.
Global Competition: Shanghai vs. New York, London, Hong Kong, and Singapore
Shanghai’s aspirations inevitably invite comparisons with established financial centers. The Global Financial Centres Index (GFCI 38), published September 2025, ranks New York first, London second, Hong Kong third, and Singapore fourth—with Shanghai placing eighth globally, ahead of Shenzhen (ninth) and Beijing (tenth).
New York and London: These centers remain dominant due to deep capital markets, predictable legal systems, full currency convertibility, and concentration of multinational corporations and global talent. New York benefits from dollar hegemony and the world’s largest economy, while London leverages time-zone positioning, English common law, and historic ties across Commonwealth nations and former colonies.
Shanghai cannot replicate these advantages. Capital controls limit convertibility, constraining foreign institutional participation. The legal system, while modernizing, operates under party oversight rather than fully independent courts. English language proficiency lags despite improvements. State influence over major financial institutions reduces perceptions of market-driven pricing.
Yet Shanghai possesses countervailing strengths: proximity to the world’s second-largest economy and largest manufacturer, government coordination capacity to mobilize resources rapidly, concentration of high-quality STEM talent at competitive costs, and—increasingly—technological sophistication in fintech and AI applications. Where New York and London excel at allocating existing capital, Shanghai integrates financial services with industrial policy and technological development in ways Western centers abandoned decades ago.
Hong Kong: The comparison here cuts deepest. Hong Kong long served as China’s window to global capital—the place where yuan could move freely, where Chinese companies listed to access international investors, where expatriates managed Asia portfolios under familiar legal frameworks. The Global Financial Centres Index shows Hong Kong widening its lead over Singapore in March 2025, reinforcing its position as Asia’s preeminent financial hub.
Yet Hong Kong’s advantages are also vulnerabilities. The 2019 protests, followed by the National Security Law and pandemic-era border closures, prompted some capital to relocate to Singapore. While Hong Kong remains indispensable for certain functions—IPO gateway, offshore yuan anchor, asset management hub—Beijing increasingly views Shanghai as the strategic alternative. If external pressures or internal instability compromise Hong Kong, Shanghai must be ready.
The relationship is less zero-sum than complementary asymmetry. Hong Kong provides the offshore platform where capital moves freely; Shanghai supplies the onshore depth, industrial linkages, and policy coordination. Together they form what Beijing envisions as a dual-hub system—though the balance of influence gradually tilts northward.
Singapore: Singapore versus Hong Kong represents Asia’s most watched financial rivalry. Singapore specializes in wealth management and serves as ASEAN’s gateway; Hong Kong dominates investment banking and links to mainland China. Post-2019, Singapore gained from Hong Kong’s troubles, attracting family offices and regional headquarters.
Shanghai’s relationship with Singapore differs. Rather than direct competition, Shanghai competes for similar functions: becoming the RMB hub, the AI innovation center, the shipping and logistics node. Singapore’s advantages—rule of law, English language, international talent—mirror those Shanghai lacks. Yet Singapore’s small size limits industrial depth and technological ecosystems that Shanghai can leverage.
The broader pattern suggests specialization more than winner-takes-all. New York and London dominate truly global functions. Hong Kong and Singapore serve as regional hubs with particular strengths. Shanghai emerges as the command center for China’s economic system—massive domestic markets, industrial policy coordination, technology-finance integration—seeking to project that model internationally through BRI and yuan internationalization.
The Shanghai Five Centers Strategy: Reinforcing Interdependencies
What distinguishes Shanghai’s approach is the deliberate cultivation of mutually reinforcing capabilities. The Shanghai Five Centers strategy operates on the premise that genuine financial power requires multiple supporting pillars:
Economic Center → Financial Center: Concentration of corporate headquarters, R&D facilities, and high-value manufacturing provides deal flow, lending opportunities, and equity offerings that sustain financial markets. Shanghai hosts regional headquarters for 891 multinational corporations and Chinese headquarters for 531 foreign-invested companies as of 2023, creating dense networks of cross-border capital flows.
Trade/Shipping Center → Financial Center: Physical goods flows generate demand for trade finance, commodity derivatives, insurance, and logistics optimization. Shanghai’s port volumes create opportunities for fintech innovations in customs clearance, supply chain finance, and blockchain-based bill of lading systems.
Innovation Center → Financial Center: Technology companies require venture capital, growth equity, and IPO markets, while generating innovations—AI credit scoring, biometric payments, quantum encryption—that reshape financial services themselves. The Shanghai Stock Exchange’s STAR Market, launched 2019, provides listing venue for tech firms, while innovation centers incubate startups that foreign VCs increasingly co-invest in.
Financial Center → All Others: Conversely, sophisticated capital markets allocate resources to the most productive uses—funding R&D, financing port expansion, underwriting trade receivables. The ability to issue yuan-denominated bonds, structure complex derivatives, and provide international payment settlement supports all other center functions.
This systemic thinking reflects Chinese planning traditions: rather than allowing markets alone to determine outcomes, authorities deliberately construct ecosystems where desired activities cluster and reinforce. Critics see inefficiency and misallocation; proponents point to rapid infrastructure deployment, coordinated industrial upgrading, and avoidance of boom-bust financial cycles that plague pure market systems.
Headwinds: Geopolitics, Demographics, Debt, and Institutional Constraints
For all its ambitions, Shanghai’s 2035 vision confronts formidable obstacles that could derail or delay progress.
Geopolitical Tensions: U.S.-China relations stabilized in late 2025 but remain fundamentally competitive. Technology restrictions limiting access to advanced chips, AI systems, and manufacturing equipment constrain Shanghai’s innovation ambitions. Financial sanctions—actual or threatened—deter international firms from deepening Shanghai exposure. Taiwan tensions create tail risks of conflict that would devastate cross-strait capital flows and potentially trigger Western sanctions similar to those imposed on Russia.
The January 2026 survey by AmCham China found 79 percent of respondents held neutral or positive views on U.S.-China relations for 2026—a 30-percentage-point improvement—yet anxiety over uncertainty persists. Companies increasingly embed geopolitical risk into investment decisions, diversifying supply chains and building resilience rather than concentrating operations. This structural caution limits the depth of international financial integration Shanghai can achieve.
Demographic Decline: Shanghai, like China broadly, faces population aging and shrinkage that threatens labor supply and consumption growth. The city’s population ceiling policies, designed to manage “big city disease,” cap growth precisely when attracting global talent matters most. Compared to Singapore or Hong Kong, Shanghai’s immigration policies remain restrictive, limiting access to the international professionals who make financial centers truly global.
Debt Overhang: China’s total debt—government, corporate, household—exceeds 280 percent of GDP, among the highest in major economies. Local government financing vehicles carry hidden liabilities from infrastructure binges. Property developers’ distress, while contained, creates banking system fragility. Shanghai’s ability to mobilize capital for 15th Five-Year Plan priorities depends on resolving these debt problems without triggering deflation or financial crisis.
The analysis of China’s 15th Five-Year Plan notes Beijing’s determination to avoid Japan’s 1990s stagnation or Asian financial crisis patterns through “controlled financial vitality”—yet achieving growth without debt accumulation or asset bubbles requires extraordinary policy calibration.
Institutional Constraints: Capital controls that protect monetary sovereignty also limit Shanghai’s appeal to international investors who demand free capital movement. State influence over major financial institutions raises questions about market pricing and credit allocation efficiency. The legal system, while improving, lacks the complete independence and precedent-based predictability that common-law jurisdictions provide.
These constraints are not temporary bugs but structural features of China’s system. Removing them—full capital account opening, judicial independence, reduced state ownership—would undermine party control. Shanghai’s challenge is achieving international financial center status within these constraints, not despite them.
Scenario Analysis: Pathways to 2035
Optimistic Scenario – “The Shanghai Ascent”: China sustains 4-5 percent annual growth through productivity gains and consumption rebalancing. U.S.-China relations remain competitive but stable, with limited escalation. RMB gradually captures 10-15 percent of global payment share as BRI countries and Global South economies diversify from dollar dependence. Shanghai’s AI and chip industries achieve breakthroughs in mature nodes and specialized applications, if not cutting-edge lithography. Financial reforms proceed incrementally—expanded Bond Connect, deeper derivatives markets, more foreign participation—without full capital account opening. By 2035, Shanghai solidly ranks as the world’s third or fourth financial center behind New York and London but ahead of or level with Hong Kong and Singapore, serving as the undisputed RMB hub and technology-finance nexus.
Base Case – “Managed Middle Power”: Growth moderates to 3-4 percent as structural headwinds intensify. Geopolitical tensions oscillate without major crises. RMB internationalization continues but plateaus at 6-8 percent of global payments—useful for regional trade and sanctions-circumvention but not a true alternative to the dollar. Shanghai makes steady progress on all Five Centers but doesn’t dramatically close gaps with leading Western hubs. Capital controls and institutional constraints limit international appeal, while Hong Kong and Singapore retain key niches. By 2035, Shanghai functions as China’s primary financial center and a significant Asian hub, but the “global influence” remains more aspirational than realized. This scenario approximates current trajectories extended forward—meaningful progress but not transformation.
Pessimistic Scenario – “The Premature Peak”: A perfect storm: Taiwan crisis triggers Western sanctions, property sector distress metastasizes into banking crisis, demographic decline accelerates, and technological decoupling intensifies. RMB internationalization stalls or reverses as confidence erodes. Foreign capital exits, multinationals relocate regional headquarters to Singapore or Tokyo, and Shanghai’s ambitions contract to serving primarily domestic markets. This scenario, while unlikely as a comprehensive package, illustrates how interconnected risks could compound. Even partial realization—say, a limited Taiwan conflict without invasion but with sustained tensions—could derail Shanghai’s international aspirations for a decade or more.
Wild Card – “The Digital Disruption”: Central bank digital currencies, AI-powered autonomous finance, and blockchain-based settlement systems fundamentally reshape global finance in ways that advantage Shanghai’s technological sophistication over Western incumbents’ legacy infrastructure. China’s lead in digital yuan, experience with mobile payments, and regulatory willingness to experiment with novel structures position Shanghai as the hub for next-generation finance—much as the U.S. leveraged telegraph and telephone to build New York’s dominance over London in the early 20th century. This scenario requires both technological breakthroughs and regulatory openness that current trends suggest but don’t guarantee.
Implications for Global Markets and Investors
Shanghai’s 2035 trajectory, regardless of which scenario unfolds, carries consequences beyond China’s borders.
For Multinationals: Companies must navigate a bifurcating financial landscape where Shanghai-centric yuan systems operate in partial parallel to dollar-based networks. Maintaining relationships with both requires redundant infrastructure—dual treasury operations, separate compliance frameworks, complex hedging strategies. Early movers who establish Shanghai presence and yuan competency may gain advantages as Chinese companies globalize and BRI countries increase yuan usage.
For Asset Managers: China’s bond and equity markets, while enormous domestically, remain underrepresented in global portfolios. If Shanghai’s financial opening continues and RMB internationalizes, allocations could shift significantly—particularly if index providers increase China weightings. Yet political risk, capital control uncertainty, and corporate governance concerns create volatility that passive strategies may underestimate.
For Financial Institutions: The question isn’t whether to engage Shanghai but how deeply. Establishing operations provides market access and positions for yuan internationalization, but regulatory complexity, competition with state-backed champions, and geopolitical risks create hazards. The optimal strategy likely involves selective participation in areas where foreign expertise commands premiums—wealth management for ultra-high-net-worth Chinese, cross-border M&A advisory, structured products—while avoiding head-to-head competition with domestic banks in retail or SME lending.
For Policymakers: Shanghai’s rise challenges Western assumptions about the indispensability of liberal democratic institutions for financial center success. If Shanghai achieves even the base-case scenario, it demonstrates that state-directed capitalism with capital controls can create formidable financial infrastructure—particularly when integrated with industrial policy and technological development. This doesn’t prove superiority but does complicate narratives about inevitable convergence toward Western models.
The broader trend toward a multipolar currency system—neither dollar hegemony nor yuan dominance but fragmentation across regional and functional spheres—seems most plausible. In this world, Shanghai serves as the yuan and Asian manufacturing hub, New York as the dollar and Western tech hub, London as the European time-zone and legal hub, with Hong Kong and Singapore bridging East and West. Competition intensifies but doesn’t produce a single winner.
Conclusion: Ambition Tempered by Reality
Shanghai’s roadmap to becoming a global financial powerhouse by 2035 represents one of the most ambitious municipal development programs ever conceived. The integration of the Shanghai international financial center 2035 vision with national priorities, the scale of resources committed, and the sophistication of strategic thinking all warrant serious attention. Unlike hype-driven smart city projects or vanity mega-developments, Shanghai’s Five Centers strategy builds on genuine competitive advantages: manufacturing depth, technological capacity, policy coordination, and enormous domestic markets.
Yet ambition alone doesn’t guarantee success. The geopolitical environment remains fraught, with U.S.-China competition likely to intensify even if outright conflict is avoided. Demographic and debt challenges constrain growth and fiscal capacity. Institutional barriers—capital controls, legal system constraints, state dominance—limit international appeal. Shanghai’s model, successful at mobilizing resources and coordinating action, proves less adept at generating the entrepreneurial dynamism, regulatory flexibility, and genuine openness that characterize leading global centers.
The most likely outcome falls between transformation and stagnation: Shanghai will strengthen its position as China’s premier financial center, expand its regional influence, and make yuan internationalization meaningful if not dominant. It will excel at integrating finance with manufacturing and technology in ways Western centers abandoned. But it will struggle to attract the international talent, capital, and institutions that would make it truly global rather than Chinese-global.
For observers, the Shanghai story offers lessons beyond China. It demonstrates how state capacity and strategic planning can achieve rapid infrastructure development and ecosystem building—capabilities that market-led Western approaches increasingly lack. It shows how financial power and technological innovation intertwine in the 21st century. And it illustrates how geopolitical competition now extends beyond military domains to encompass financial architecture, payment systems, and the infrastructure of global commerce.
Whether Shanghai’s 2035 vision succeeds, stumbles, or achieves something between, the attempt itself reshapes the landscape of global finance. The era of uncontested Western dominance of international financial centers is ending—not because the West is collapsing but because China has built, with deliberation and enormous resources, an alternative. That alternative may prove inferior in some respects, superior in others, and simply different in most. The decade ahead will reveal which assessments prove accurate.
For now, along the Huangpu River, construction cranes still crowd the skyline, LED facades illuminate the night, and planners debate the details of how to allocate the next trillion yuan in investment. The gap between vision and reality remains vast. But if history offers any lesson, it is that discounting Shanghai’s ability to exceed expectations—or Beijing’s determination to see the vision realized—is a wager few should make lightly.
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Analysis
From 1MDB to ‘Corporate Mafia’: Malaysia’s New Governance Test
A decade after 1MDB shook Malaysia, a new scandal targets the anti-graft agency itself. Are the rules still being applied fairly — or is the watchdog now the predator?
The Gunman in the Restaurant
On a June afternoon in 2023, Tai Boon Wee was summoned to The Social, a Kuala Lumpur suburb restaurant famous for football screenings and chicken wings. He had just been questioned by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission over accounting irregularities at GIIB Holdings, the rubber products company he founded. When he arrived, a man named Andy Lim — a new shareholder — was waiting. Before long, Lim raised his arms to reveal a pistol beneath his jacket. He wanted two board seats, and the weapon was his negotiating tool.
The CCTV footage of that meeting, reviewed by Bloomberg journalists Tom Redmond and Niki Koswanage, would become the combustible heart of one of the most consequential investigative reports in Southeast Asian financial journalism in years. Published on February 11, 2026, the Bloomberg feature — titled “Who’s Watching Malaysia’s Anti-Corruption Watchdog?” — described how a commission set up to fight graft was allegedly helping a group of businessmen seize control of companies, with questions about its conduct going all the way to the top. Bloomberg
That question — all the way to the top — is the one that Kuala Lumpur has been unable to shake since. And for global investors already edgy about rule-of-law risks in Southeast Asia, it is exactly the kind of question that changes capital allocation decisions.
Malaysia is facing a new governance test. One that may prove more corrosive to institutional credibility than even 1MDB — because this time, the allegation is not that the watchdog failed. It is that the watchdog became the wolf.
A Different Kind of Scandal
The 1MDB affair — in which an estimated $4.5 billion was looted from a state investment fund and spent on superyachts, Picassos, and Hollywood productions — was breathtaking in its brazenness but ultimately comprehensible. It was a straight-line theft: powerful men used state resources as a personal treasury. International prosecutors, from Washington to Singapore to Zurich, followed the money. Najib Razak was convicted. Goldman Sachs paid. The architecture of the crime, however grotesque, was legible.
What Bloomberg’s 2026 investigation describes is something structurally different — and, in some ways, more insidious. The report details how the MACC, led by chief commissioner Azam Baki, is alleged to have assisted rogue businessmen in forcibly taking over public-listed companies by using the agency’s extensive powers to arrest, intimidate, and threaten charges against company founders and executives. MalaysiaNow The alleged playbook is precise and repeatable: targeted investors take stakes, MACC probes are triggered against company founders, bank accounts are frozen, board seats reshuffled, and in some instances founders are pushed out altogether. Dimsum Daily
This is not theft by subtraction — the pillaging of a state fund. It is theft by substitution: the weaponisation of the state’s anti-corruption apparatus to facilitate corporate predation in the private sector. It attacks the engine of market confidence itself.
Victor Chin, a Malaysian businessman himself under investigation for alleged involvement in the scheme, put it with chilling clarity in a March statement: “The corporate mafia is not just about a person or single organisation. It is a tactic, and it is ongoing. The individuals may change, and the target companies may differ, but the method remains the same in each corporate attack.” Bloomberg
When the alleged perpetrators of a scheme are the ones best placed to describe its mechanics, you know the system has entered a complex moral inversion.
The Architecture of the ‘Corporate Mafia’
At the operational centre of the Bloomberg investigation is a MACC unit known as “Section D,” which handles complaints and arrests related to corruption in listed companies. The unit was led by Wong Yun Fui, currently MACC’s deputy director of investigations. MalaysiaNow According to the report, this unit became the enforcement arm that businessmen allegedly used to apply pressure on company founders.
The gunman episode at The Social restaurant crystallised the alleged methodology. After Tai Boon Wee was approached by Andy Lim — who demanded board seats at GIIB Holdings with a firearm — police eventually arrested Lim and confiscated the pistol. But sources told Bloomberg that Azam subsequently called the police to request the return of Lim’s gun, and that conversations within MACC revealed Lim was “very close with Azam Baki,” a friendship also referenced in an internal memo circulated within the agency. MalaysiaNow
Azam has denied the allegations comprehensively and filed a lawsuit against Bloomberg seeking RM100 million in damages. The MACC’s advisory board urged an end to speculation, arguing assessments must be grounded in verifiable facts.
But the Bloomberg investigation did not rest on a single incident. Another businessman, Brian Ng, recounted a similar experience to that of Tai: facing an MACC investigation, he was summoned to a restaurant meeting with one Francis Leong, allegedly a member of the same “corporate mafia” network linked to Victor Chin. MalaysiaNow The pattern recurs: MACC investigation, unexpected meeting, coercive demand.
Then came Victor Chin’s own allegations. In April 2026, Chin filed suit against Aminul Islam — also known as Amin — a labor tycoon involved in Malaysia’s foreign worker recruitment sector, alleging that Aminul orchestrated pressure from law enforcement agencies and applied other tactics in an attempt to take over NexG Bhd, a provider of identification systems, where Chin had served as chief operating officer until September 2025. Bloomberg
NexG is not a minor player. The company holds lucrative government contracts worth over RM2.5 billion to supply identification documents, including passports, foreign worker IDs, and driving licences. Asia News Network In other words, at the centre of an alleged “corporate mafia” operation is a company controlling some of the most sensitive state-issued identity infrastructure in the country. The governance implications are not merely financial.
The Azam Baki Question — and Anwar’s Dilemma
Azam Baki’s tenure at MACC has been extended three times by Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim MalaysiaNow, a remarkable act of institutional loyalty — or political insulation — given the accumulation of controversies. Bloomberg reported that corporate filings showed Azam held 17.7 million shares in Velocity Capital Partner Bhd as of last year, a stake worth roughly RM800,000 at recent prices, above guideline thresholds for public officials. Dimsum Daily Azam subsequently admitted to purchasing the shares while serving as MACC chief but maintained he had broken no laws, saying the holdings were acquired transparently and disposed of within the year.
This was notably not the first time. Azam was previously implicated for the same alleged violation back in 2021 and was absolved after the Securities Commission determined his brother had used his trading account. MalaysiaNow The pattern of allegation, denial, and institutional absolution has cycled twice now, each rotation generating less public credulity than the last.
Anwar’s handling of the crisis has drawn intense scrutiny. Bloomberg reported that Anwar urged officials to avoid immediately releasing a report on Azam’s shareholdings to the public — a report produced by a three-person committee of senior civil servants led by the attorney-general, which had reported its findings to cabinet and been referred to the chief secretary for next steps. Bloomberg The delay — combined with the composition of the investigative panel, all members of which are appointed by and report directly to the prime minister — prompted civil society groups to question whether an “independent” panel was anything of the sort.
Civil society groups called for any commission to be led by a figure of genuine judicial stature, such as former Chief Justice Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat, and to operate outside the orbit of executive appointment. Bloomberg That call has gone unanswered.
Anwar’s own position has been contradictory to a degree that has frustrated even his allies. In Parliament on March 3, he said he disagreed with Bloomberg’s allegations but acknowledged the investigations remained open. When questioned about the government’s level of transparency, he told the Dewan Rakyat: “Both of these are not closed — that is the difference.” The Star It is a distinction that fails to satisfy an electorate watching police visit Bloomberg’s office in the Petronas Towers — the physical centrepiece of Malaysia’s modernity — to demand the names of the journalists who wrote the stories.
Police launched a criminal defamation investigation into Bloomberg under Section 500 of the Penal Code and Section 233 of the Communications and Multimedia Act 1998 — both laws frequently used to silence government critics, journalists, and whistleblowers. MalaysiaNow Shooting the messenger is never a good look for a government committed, rhetorically at least, to institutional reform.
Why This Is More Corrosive Than 1MDB
The comparison to 1MDB is unavoidable, but it can mislead. The 1MDB scandal was, in its grotesque way, a monument to old-school kleptocracy: money looted, laundered, and spent. It was recoverable — legally, reputationally, institutionally — because it was a crime committed against the state’s governance apparatus, not through it.
What the MACC “corporate mafia” allegations describe, if credible, is a crime committed through the state’s governance apparatus. And that distinction matters enormously for investor confidence.
When you corrupt a state fund, you destroy one institution. When you allegedly corrupt the anti-corruption institution itself — instrumentalising it as the enforcement arm of private predation — you undermine the entire architecture of market governance. Every listed company becomes a potential target. Every MACC investigation becomes a source of uncertainty rather than assurance. The cost of doing business in Malaysia rises not because of regulatory overreach, but because of regulatory arbitrage by the powerful.
Malaysia is already facing a threat of investor flight in cases of transparency lapses — FDI reportedly declined 15% in the fourth quarter of 2025, a drop analysts have linked to the accumulation of governance-related uncertainty. TECHi The country’s Corruption Perceptions Index score has stagnated at around 50 out of 100, a reflection of persistent concerns about public sector integrity that have remained largely unaddressed despite the post-1MDB reform rhetoric. Ainvest
The geopolitical stakes compound this domestic governance failure. Malaysia sits at the intersection of the US-China technology competition, hosting semiconductor facilities critical to both Western supply chain diversification and China’s regional ambitions. The United States alone reported $7.4 billion in approved investments in Malaysia in 2024, with Germany and China following closely. U.S. Department of State Investors selecting between Kuala Lumpur, Ho Chi Minh City, and Penang as regional bases are doing so in an environment where governance credibility is a quantifiable competitive variable, not a soft consideration.
A country that cannot guarantee that its anti-corruption agency will not be weaponised against the companies that foreign investors have backed is a country that will see capital quietly redirect to neighbours less entangled in institutional scandal.
The Political Fallout: Alliances Fracturing
The corporate mafia allegations have metastasised beyond a governance controversy into a political crisis for Anwar’s unity coalition. Human Resources Minister Ramanan Ramakrishnan — a senior figure in Anwar’s Parti Keadilan Rakyat — was compelled to publicly deny in late March that he had solicited or received a RM9.5 million bribe from Victor Chin, allegedly to help resolve Chin’s legal troubles with the police and MACC. Bloomberg “I never met him. I don’t know him,” Ramanan insisted. The denial may be truthful, but the requirement to make it is itself a measure of how deeply the scandal has penetrated.
Even within Anwar’s coalition, frustration has reached breaking point: DAP, a key coalition partner, moved its national congress two months earlier — from September to July — so members could vote on whether to remain in Anwar’s government depending on whether genuine reforms actually materialise. The Rakyat Post That is a live tripwire beneath an already fragile coalition arithmetic.
When three young protestors interrupted an Azam Baki speech on integrity in early April with placards calling for his arrest, they were detained — prompting lawyers to condemn what they described as a violation of constitutionally guaranteed free speech. MalaysiaNow The irony of arresting citizens for protesting at an integrity event is the kind of tableau that writes itself into the international press cycle.
As of mid-April, Azam’s contract as MACC chief is set to expire on May 12, and reporting by Singapore’s Straits Times — citing high-level sources — suggests his tenure will not be renewed, with Anwar himself reportedly telling cabinet in recent weeks: “Azam is done.” The Star If confirmed, this would mark a significant reversal after three contract extensions — and would almost certainly be read less as a principled reform decision than as political triage, the abandonment of a liability rather than a genuine reckoning with institutional failure.
What Global Governance Frameworks Are Saying
The World Bank’s Worldwide Governance Indicators consistently flag Malaysia’s “Rule of Law” and “Control of Corruption” scores as weak relative to the country’s income level — a divergence that academics have termed the “Malaysian governance paradox”: sophisticated economic management coexisting with institutional opacity.
The IMF’s Article IV consultations on Malaysia have repeatedly emphasised the need for transparent anti-corruption enforcement as a prerequisite for sustained productivity-led growth. The MACC’s alleged weaponisation, if substantiated, would represent precisely the type of governance failure IMF analysts flag as most damaging to private sector confidence — not because it increases regulatory burden, but because it makes regulatory enforcement unpredictable and politically transactional.
ASEAN peers are watching closely. Thailand’s Securities and Exchange Commission has accelerated its own listed-company protection framework in the past 18 months. Indonesia’s Financial Services Authority (OJK) has strengthened minority shareholder protections. Vietnam has passed sweeping anti-corruption amendments. Malaysia, which marketed itself aggressively as a reformed investment destination post-1MDB, risks ceding ground in the regional governance competition at precisely the moment when FDI is being reshuffled by supply-chain decoupling and the semiconductor buildout.
The Path Forward: Five Prescriptions
The question of whether Malaysia is facing a new governance test has been answered — it plainly is. The more urgent question is whether its institutions retain the capacity to pass it.
First, a genuinely independent Royal Commission of Inquiry is the necessary minimum. The current multi-agency task force — comprising the police, Securities Commission, MACC, and Inland Revenue Board — suffers from an obvious conflict: the MACC is both an investigating body and a subject of investigation. Civil society groups have rightly called for a commission led by figures of judicial stature entirely outside the executive appointment chain. Bloomberg
Second, the long-delayed reform to separate the Attorney General’s dual role as both chief legal adviser to the government and public prosecutor must be enacted as a matter of urgency. As long as the same official advises the cabinet and controls prosecution decisions, the structural incentive for political interference in high-profile cases remains intact.
Third, the MACC’s internal oversight architecture — specifically the “Section D” unit and its relationship to listed-company investigations — requires forensic external audit. This is not simply an accountability exercise; it is a market integrity imperative. The Bursa Malaysia cannot operate as a transparent exchange if its listed companies are subject to coercive manipulation through regulatory channels.
Fourth, whistleblower protection legislation must be materially strengthened. The current framework explicitly excludes protection for those who disclose allegations to the media — a provision that chills the very disclosures necessary for public accountability.
Fifth, and perhaps most fundamentally, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim must choose between political calculation and institutional credibility. He cannot occupy both positions simultaneously. His decision to repeatedly extend Azam’s tenure, to resist the rapid release of the investigative committee’s findings, and to characterise Bloomberg’s reporting as a “foreign-backed” operation has forfeited credibility with precisely the international investor and civil society audience whose confidence is essential to his economic reform agenda.
The reputational cost of delay compounds with time. Every week that the corporate mafia inquiry remains procedurally murky is another week in which fund managers in Singapore, London, and New York quietly update their country-risk matrices.
Conclusion: The Watchdog Must Be Watched
Ten years ago, 1MDB forced the world to ask whether Malaysia’s institutions could survive political capture. The answer, eventually, was yes — at enormous cost, over a decade, and only with the weight of international law enforcement bearing down on Kuala Lumpur from multiple continents.
The corporate mafia allegations present a more structurally dangerous question: not whether an institution failed, but whether an institution was deliberately inverted — turned from a shield for market integrity into a weapon against it. If the allegations are substantiated, the damage is not confined to the MACC. It radiates outward to the Securities Commission, to Bursa Malaysia, to every listed company where founders must now wonder whether an unexpected call from a new shareholder is a market transaction or the opening gambit of a coordinated predation.
Malaysia has the economic fundamentals to absorb governance shocks. Its semiconductor positioning, its infrastructure, its skilled workforce — these are genuine competitive assets. But assets depreciate when institutions corrode. And institutions corrode fastest when the people charged with preventing corruption become, in the vocabulary of the street, part of the mafia.
The answer to the question — is Malaysia facing a new governance test? — is unambiguous. What remains uncertain is whether Kuala Lumpur’s political class has learned, from the long, expensive, humiliating lesson of 1MDB, that the cost of institutional failure is paid not in one dramatic reckoning, but in thousands of small decisions made by investors and companies who quietly chose to build elsewhere.
The watchdog must be watched. Malaysia’s institutions know this. The question is whether they have the will to act on it before the window closes.
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Analysis
Wall Street Banks Set to Report $40bn Trading Haul as the Iran War Rekindles Market Volatility
Wall Street’s biggest banks are tracking a $40bn Q1 2026 trading bonanza fueled by the Iran war’s oil shock, VIX spike, and Hormuz chaos. Who profits — and who pays the price.
Key Statistics at a Glance
| Metric | Figure | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Combined trading haul | ~$40bn | Q1 2026, top 6 U.S. banks |
| Equities trading (top 5) | $18bn | 2× the aggregate a decade ago |
| Hormuz transit collapse | 94% | Vessel-count drop since strikes |
| Brent crude peak | $110/bbl | Intraday high, March 2026 |
| VIX high (March 2026) | ~32 | From mid-teens pre-conflict |
| S&P 500 YTD (Mar 31) | −7% | Worst start to a year since 2020 |
The Paradox No One Wants to Name
There is a particular kind of cognitive dissonance that settles over financial journalism every time war and earnings season collide. On one side of the ledger: oil past $100 a barrel, stagflation fears coursing through emerging markets, and American families facing a pump-price shock that risks reshaping the 2026 midterms. On the other: the trading floors of JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo, humming at a frequency they haven’t reached in years — their desks positioned to collect what analysts now project as a combined $40 billion in Q1 trading revenues.
That number lands this week in earnings releases beginning with Goldman Sachs on April 13 and continuing through the major banks over the following two days.
That number — $40 billion — deserves context. The equities component alone — roughly $18 billion for the top five banks, according to data compiled by Goldman Sachs and cited in analyst notes — represents more than double what those same desks harvested a decade ago. The math is unambiguous. Volatility is Wall Street’s oxygen. And war, it turns out, is among the most reliable oxygen tanks ever invented.
“The market doesn’t fear negative news per se. What the market really fears is what we call a ‘second-moment shock’ — a fancy way of saying uncertainty.”
— John Bai, Professor of Finance, Northeastern University
By the Numbers: What Each Bank Is Expected to Report
The earnings season unfolds in a compressed four-day window. Here is what the analyst consensus looks like heading into those critical spring mornings, drawing on data compiled by Alphastreet, Zacks Research, and FinancialContent:
| Bank | Q1 2026 Revenue Est. | YoY Growth | Report Date | Key Trading Signal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goldman Sachs | $16.9bn | +12% | Apr 13 | ECM surge + trading desk dominance |
| JPMorgan Chase | ~$48.9bn | +8% | Apr 14 | FICC +16%; equities up 40% YoY |
| Citigroup | $23.6bn | +9% | Apr 14 | EPS est. +34% YoY; EM repositioning |
| Wells Fargo | $21.8bn | +8% | Apr 14 | Financials sector upgrade; oil hedging |
| Morgan Stanley | $19.7bn | +11% | Apr 15 | Defense/aerospace sector rotation |
| Bank of America | TBA | 16th consec. quarter ↑ | Apr 15 | 16th consecutive quarter of trading rev. growth |
JPMorgan’s Commercial & Investment Bank (CIB) division told investors to expect fixed-income markets revenues of $6.78 billion — a 16% increase year-over-year — with management guiding investment banking fees up “mid-to-high-teens.” That is before accounting for the full March shock, which many strategists believe will push the final tally above consensus. For Goldman, the same forces that have stalled M&A — geopolitical friction, elevated rates, regulatory scrutiny of “defense and energy megamergers” — have paradoxically supercharged the trading desk it built precisely for this moment.
The Iran Catalyst: A Supply Shock Without Precedent
The trigger for all of this is now five weeks old and still, as of this writing, unresolved at its roots. Following U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iranian facilities, commercial vessel-count data confirmed a 94% collapse in Strait of Hormuz transits. Goldman Sachs commodity strategist Daan Struyven was direct in his characterization: the Hormuz disruption represents the largest oil supply shock in recorded history, surpassing the 1973 OPEC embargo, which interrupted roughly 7% of global supply. At stake today: approximately 20%.
Brent crude, which opened the year well below $90 per barrel, breached $103 at the open of one Monday trading session before the G7’s promise of supply support pulled it back toward $94 — before President Trump’s April 1 primetime address sent it above $100 once more, with Goldman revising its April forecast to $115 a barrel. Twice. In two weeks.
The result, for trading desks, was a cascade of profit opportunities that textbooks cannot fully capture. Commodity trading advisers alone sold roughly $48 billion in S&P 500 futures over a single month — a mechanical deleveraging that amplifies market volatility regardless of directional conviction. The VIX, Wall Street’s canonical fear gauge, spiked from mid-teen levels to a high of approximately 32 in early March, settling near 26 as a ceasefire announcement arrived on April 10. For options desks, for FICC traders, for prime brokerage teams managing liquidity under extraordinary pressure — this is precisely the environment for which they are staffed, capitalized, and compensated.
“The largest oil supply shock in history — surpassing 1973 OPEC, with approximately 20% of global supply at stake.”
— Daan Struyven, Goldman Sachs Commodity Strategist
Inside the Desks: Goldman Maps Three Scenarios, Tells Clients to Reduce Exposure
The most revealing window into how Wall Street’s trading machinery actually operates during a crisis came from Tony Pasquariello, Goldman Sachs’s partner and global head of hedge fund coverage. Rather than projecting false confidence about the conflict’s resolution, Pasquariello told institutional clients directly that the desks had “no high-confidence edge” on probabilities across three distinct Iran scenarios:
Scenario 1 — Mission Accomplished
Rapid conflict conclusion. Oil retraces. Equities recover. Volatility collapses. A short-window hedge unwind enriches those positioned correctly on both the entry and the exit.
Scenario 2 — 45-Day Ceasefire
Hostilities pause without resolution. Sustained Hormuz disruption lingers. Inflation persists. The Fed remains constrained. FICC desks continue to earn elevated spread income through the second quarter.
Scenario 3 — Ground Escalation
A prolonged campaign. Oil approaches $130. The stagflation scenario Wells Fargo Investment Institute and Charles Schwab both identify as a genuine tail risk materializes. Global recession odds rise meaningfully. Credit provisions follow — but only later.
Pasquariello’s recommendation was textbook in its elegance: manage gross equity exposure lower, hold highly liquid securities, and for those seeking directional upside, use call spreads rather than outright longs. This is not just prudent risk management — it is geopolitical monetization at institutional scale. The very act of mapping uncertainty, pricing it, offering hedges against it, and facilitating client repositioning generates spread income. War, in this framing, is not a disruption to Wall Street’s business model. It is a feature of it.
Charles Schwab’s April 10 analysis noted that the ceasefire announcement markets responded to appears driven more by “rapid unwinds of hedges and speculative positioning than by a fundamental resolution of the conflict” — a phrase that, read between the lines, describes exactly the kind of two-sided liquidity provision that trading desks bill for, on the way in and on the way out.
The Fed Trap: When Geopolitical Risk Meets the Rate Cycle
The macro backdrop against which all of this is unfolding is simultaneously the greatest tailwind and the greatest threat to sustained trading profitability. The Federal Reserve, after successfully guiding rates into a “neutral” zone of 3.50% to 3.75%, now faces an inflation print running near 3% — constrained from cutting by precisely the energy shock that Wall Street is monetizing. Morgan Stanley’s Global Investment Office was blunt: “The key economic risk is duration. Sustained higher oil prices can broaden into other costs and raise the odds of higher rates for longer.”
Higher-for-longer rates are, on balance, positive for bank trading revenues in the near term — elevated Treasury yields sustain FICC volumes, credit spreads widen and compress with every headline, and duration management becomes a daily imperative for institutional portfolios. But they compress the M&A pipeline, weigh on leveraged buyout activity, and create the very private credit stress that several strategists now quietly flag as a shadow risk for Q3 and Q4 balance sheets. The banks are collecting a trading haul today that may fund the credit provisions of tomorrow.
A Structural Shift, Not a Volatility Bonus
The deepest insight embedded in this $40 billion quarterly figure is not the number itself, but what it reveals about the permanent reconfiguration of bank revenue streams. A decade ago, the combined equities trading haul for the top five American banks would have been roughly half of the $18 billion now projected. The growth is not simply a function of larger balance sheets or more sophisticated instruments. It reflects the structural entrenchment of geopolitical volatility as a permanent feature of market pricing — not an episodic shock, but a baseline condition.
Morgan Stanley’s research arm put the point elegantly in its 2026 outlook: “Investors may need to price in a world where regional blocs and strategic competition drive markets, risk premiums and asset allocation.” This is the world the trading desks already live in. Since 2020, each year has delivered at least one macro shock of sufficient magnitude to supercharge volatility: a pandemic, a land war in Europe, a regional banking crisis, tariff escalation, and now a direct U.S. military engagement in the Persian Gulf. The trading desks have not merely adapted to this environment — they have structurally expanded to capture it.
Goldman’s own framing of its Q1 story is instructive here. Analysts note the firm is pivoting its advisory services toward “geo-risk management” — a euphemism that would have been unthinkable in a Goldman pitch deck circa 2015, but which now represents an entire product category. The client who needs to hedge Hormuz exposure, protect an energy book, or reposition a sovereign wealth fund away from Middle Eastern risk is, for Goldman’s trading floor, a revenue event.
The Moral Hazard the Market Doesn’t Want to Discuss
There is an uncomfortable corollary to all of this that financial journalism often elides in the rush to publish earnings previews. The same conflict that is funding Wall Street’s most profitable quarter in years is, for most of the global economy, an unambiguous catastrophe. European and Asian equity markets — far more exposed to Middle Eastern energy imports — have been particularly punished, with stagflation fears driving median real quarterly returns on the Stoxx 600 toward deeply negative territory. Gold, despite conventional wisdom about its safe-haven properties, headed for its worst monthly performance since 2008 as dollar strength and rate expectations overwhelmed the geopolitical bid.
For retail investors and pensioners whose savings are benchmarked to indices that fell 7% year-to-date through March, the Q1 trading bonanza of the six largest U.S. banks is a complex data point. It does not mean the system is broken. But it does illuminate the degree to which modern financial architecture is designed to extract revenue from volatility — which means, at some level, it is designed to extract revenue from crisis. That is not a conspiracy. It is a function. Understanding it clearly is the beginning of informed investing, not the end of it.
“Geopolitical risk is becoming a persistent part of the backdrop, not merely episodic. Investors may need to price in a world where regional blocs and strategic competition drive markets.”
— Morgan Stanley Global Investment Office, 2026
What Investors Should Actually Do
Across 40 major geopolitical events spanning 85 years, the S&P 500 lost an average of just 0.9% in the first month before recovering to gain 3.4% over the following six. The investors most harmed by crises are almost always those who exit during the drawdown and miss the recovery. But this historical comfort requires nuance in 2026: the Iran conflict carries an inflation pass-through risk that is categorically different from typical geopolitical shocks, because it operates through the most persistent input price in the global economy — energy. If Brent stays above $100 long enough to embed in core inflation expectations, the Fed’s path narrows further, and the multiple compression on long-duration assets becomes self-reinforcing.
Wells Fargo Investment Institute currently favors U.S. Large- and Mid-Cap Equities over international markets, with a preference for Utilities, Industrials, and — critically — Financials. The banks set to report this week are themselves a favored sector in a stagflation-adjacent environment: their trading revenues rise with volatility, their FICC desks benefit from elevated rates, and their balance sheets are substantially better capitalized than in any prior geopolitical stress episode. Morgan Stanley adds defense, aerospace, drones, satellites, and missile defense to the structural overweight list — sectors whose multiyear demand is now underwritten by government balance sheets on both sides of the Atlantic.
The most important thing, in the current environment, is to distinguish between what is temporary and what is structural. The ceasefire announced April 10 is likely the former. The world in which geopolitical volatility is Wall Street’s most reliable profit engine is emphatically the latter. Invest accordingly.
Key Takeaways
- Wall Street’s six largest banks are tracking approximately $40bn in combined Q1 2026 trading revenues, with equities alone generating roughly $18bn for the top five — more than double a decade ago.
- The Iran war triggered a 94% collapse in Strait of Hormuz transits — the largest oil supply shock in recorded history according to Goldman Sachs — sending Brent above $100 and the VIX toward 32.
- Goldman Sachs’s Tony Pasquariello advised hedge fund clients to cut gross equity exposure and favor liquidity; the desk mapped three distinct Iran scenarios with no high-confidence base case.
- The Federal Reserve is effectively trapped by the energy-induced inflation shock, constraining its room for cuts and sustaining elevated yields that benefit FICC trading desks.
- The $40bn haul signals a structural shift: geopolitical risk is no longer episodic — it has become Wall Street’s baseline revenue driver. The trading desks have expanded specifically to capture it.
- History favors staying invested through geopolitical shocks; but the inflation pass-through risk from sustained $100+ oil makes the 2026 episode categorically more dangerous than most predecessors.
- Favored portfolio sectors: U.S. Large-Cap Financials, Energy, Defense/Aerospace, and gold as a medium-term hedge once dollar strength and rate expectations stabilize.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are Wall Street banks reporting record trading revenues during the Iran war?
Conflict-driven volatility dramatically increases trading volumes across equities, fixed-income, currencies, and commodities. Banks earn spread income — the difference between buy and sell prices — on each transaction, as well as fees from facilitating client hedges and portfolio repositioning. The Iran war has elevated the VIX toward 32, sent oil above $100, and generated extraordinary demand for hedging instruments, creating near-ideal conditions for trading desk profitability.
What is the breakdown of the $40bn trading haul between equities and FICC?
Analysts project roughly $18bn in equities trading revenues for the top five banks in Q1 2026 — more than double the figure from a decade prior. The remainder ($22bn+) is distributed across Fixed Income, Currencies, and Commodities (FICC), with JPMorgan’s FICC desk alone expected to generate approximately $6.78bn, up 16% year-over-year.
How does the Iran war affect the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decisions?
The oil price shock from the Iran war has kept headline U.S. inflation running near 3%, well above the Fed’s 2% target. With rates already at a “neutral” 3.50–3.75%, the Fed has limited room to cut without risking a resurgence of inflationary pressure. Several forecasters project the elevated oil environment will push 2026 inflation forecasts higher, forcing the Fed to hold rates for longer — a scenario that continues to benefit bank FICC trading desks.
Should investors buy bank stocks heading into Q1 2026 earnings?
This article does not constitute investment advice. However, analyst consensus from Wells Fargo Investment Institute, Morgan Stanley, and Goldman Sachs currently favors the Financials sector in a stagflation-adjacent environment, citing elevated trading revenues, well-capitalized balance sheets, and FICC income resilience. Investors should weigh potential credit provision increases in the second half of 2026 as a meaningful counterbalancing risk.
Sources
- Goldman Sachs Q1 2026 Preview — FinancialContent / MarketMinute
- Goldman Traders Map Iran Conflict Scenarios — Prism News
- Iran War: Ceasefire Offers Relief, Not Resolution — Charles Schwab
- Iran Conflict: Oil Price Impacts and Inflation — Morgan Stanley
- Iran War Oil Shock: Stock Market Impacts — Morgan Stanley
- Bank Earnings Preview Q1 2026 — Alphastreet
- Is JPM a Buy Before Q1 Earnings? — Zacks
- Iran War and Your Portfolio — Defiant Capital Group
- Iran War Update — Wells Fargo Investment Institute
- Stocks, Bonds and Commodities: How Global Markets Have Traded the Iran War — CNBC
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Analysis
Singapore-Australia LNG Pact: The Indo-Pacific’s Most Important Energy Deal of 2026
Singapore and Australia’s legally binding LNG and diesel supply agreement is rewriting Indo-Pacific energy security. Here’s why this deal matters far beyond both nations’ borders.
When Lawrence Wong stood at the Istana on Friday morning alongside Anthony Albanese and declared that this pact was “not just about managing today’s crisis, but about building trusted supply lines for a more uncertain future,” he was doing something that most politicians in 2026 conspicuously avoid: telling the complete truth. Strip away the diplomatic language, the handshakes, and the hard-hat photo opportunity at Jurong Island’s LNG terminals, and what you find underneath is something quietly historic. Two middle powers — one the world’s premier trading entrepôt, the other its third-largest LNG exporter — have decided that in an era defined by chokepoint warfare, legal commitments to energy supply are worth more than the paper they’re printed on. They may be right. And the rest of the Indo-Pacific should be paying close attention.
Why the Strait of Hormuz Has Changed Everything
To understand what Singapore and Australia agreed to on April 10, 2026, you have to first understand the world they woke up to in early March.
Until the U.S.–Israeli war against Iran, the Strait of Hormuz was open and roughly 25% of the world’s seaborne oil trade and 20% of global LNG passed through it. Wikipedia That calculus collapsed with terrifying speed. Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz disrupted 20% of global oil supplies and significant LNG volumes, sending Brent crude surging past $120 per barrel and forcing QatarEnergy to declare force majeure on all exports. Wikipedia The head of the International Energy Agency called it “the greatest global energy security challenge in history.” Wikipedia
The numbers since have only grown more alarming. Dated Brent hit an 18-year high of $141.26 per barrel on April 2 MEES, while diesel prices are forecast to peak at more than $5.80 per gallon in April and average $4.80 per gallon through 2026 U.S. Energy Information Administration — devastating for the farming and mining sectors that underpin Australia’s export economy. Meanwhile, LNG spot prices in Asia more than doubled to three-year highs, reaching $25.40 per million British thermal units as QatarEnergy declared force majeure at Ras Laffan — the world’s largest liquefaction facility, responsible for 20% of global LNG production. Wikipedia

For Singapore, the crisis landed particularly hard. Singapore and Taiwan depend more on Qatari LNG than most Asian economies, Wikipedia and production at Singapore’s Jurong Island refineries has been limited because most of the oil processed there comes via the Strait of Hormuz. NEOS KOSMOS For Australia, the problem runs in the opposite but equally dangerous direction: Australia imports more than 80 percent of its petrol, diesel, and jet fuel from overseas, mostly from South Korea, Singapore, Japan, Taiwan, and Malaysia. The Diplomat A nation that sells the world its gas but can barely refine enough diesel to power its own tractors — that is the paradox at the heart of Australian energy policy, and it has never been more exposed than it is today.
The Architecture of the Singapore–Australia Legally Binding Energy Agreement
What Was Actually Agreed — and Why “Legally Binding” Matters
The joint statement issued by both prime ministers goes considerably further than the March pledge. Both leaders directed their ministers to conclude a legally binding Protocol to the Singapore-Australia Free Trade Agreement (SAFTA) on Economic Resilience and Essential Supplies, and welcomed the establishment of an Australia–Singapore Economic Resilience Dialogue, co-chaired by senior officials, to facilitate cooperation on economic resilience challenges and trade in essential supplies. Ministry of Foreign Affairs Singapore
This is not, as cynics might dismiss it, a diplomatic press release dressed in legalese. Embedding supply commitments into a protocol to an existing free trade agreement gives them treaty-level standing. In a world where spot market bidding wars are already erupting, with LNG suppliers becoming increasingly selective in negotiating mid- to long-term volumes because it’s more lucrative to sell into the spot market, Bloomberg having legal standing to demand preferential access is not a soft power gesture — it is hard economic architecture.
The underlying trade logic is elegant precisely because it is symmetrical. More than a quarter of all fuel imported into Australia comes from Singapore, while Australia provides about one-third of the city-state’s LNG supply. The Daily Advertiser Albanese articulated it plainly: “We are a big supplier of LNG to Singapore. Singapore is a really important refiner of our liquid fuels. This is a relationship of very substantial mutual economic benefit.” Both countries agreed to “make maximum efforts to meet each other’s energy security needs.” Yahoo!
The genius of this structure is that neither country is doing a favour. They are executing a swap — Australian gas for Singaporean refined products — and now writing that swap into binding international law before the next crisis hits.
What It Does Not (Yet) Do
Intellectual honesty requires acknowledging the limits. The joint statement contains no specific shipment volumes, no price-fixing mechanism, no explicit strategic reserve sharing agreement, and no stated timeline for when the SAFTA protocol will be concluded. “Working quickly” is a political phrase, not a procurement schedule.
The more fundamental challenge is Singapore’s refinery throughput. An LNG tanker can cost $250 million, and insurance concerns alone mean operations cannot simply be ramped up and down based on perceived escalations or de-escalations. CNBC Singapore is committed — but commitment is not the same as capacity. If the Strait of Hormuz remains closed into the northern hemisphere summer, Singapore’s refineries will be processing less crude regardless of which bilateral agreements are in place.
The Indo-Pacific Energy Security Realignment — China’s Shadow and AUKUS Synergy
A Geopolitical Sorting Process Is Underway
On March 4, the IRGC announced that the strait is closed to any vessel going “to and from” the ports of the U.S., Israel, and their allies. Subsequently, reports emerged that Iran would allow only Chinese vessels to pass through the strait, citing China’s supportive stance towards Iran. Wikipedia Read that sentence twice, slowly. This is not an energy story. This is a geopolitical sorting machine, restructuring the global energy map along lines of political alignment.
Australia and Singapore are unmistakably on one side of that divide. Both are Quad-adjacent, both are democracies with deep security ties to Washington, and both are now accelerating energy arrangements with each other precisely because they cannot rely on the Gulf supply corridor that Beijing is quietly privileged to use. The Singapore–Australia critical supplies pact 2026 is, in this light, a de facto statement about which bloc each country is wagering its energy future on.
This is the AUKUS undertow that neither government will name explicitly in polite company. The defence partnership’s security architecture and the energy partnership announced Friday are two different expressions of the same strategic logic: when the chips are down, trust the relationship, not the market.
Europe’s Cautionary Tale — and Australia’s Strategic Leverage
Europe is expected to suffer a second energy crisis primarily as a result of the suspension of Qatari LNG and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The conflict coincided with historically low European gas storage levels — estimated at just 30% capacity following a harsh 2025–2026 winter — causing Dutch TTF gas benchmarks to nearly double to over €60 per megawatt-hour by mid-March. Wikipedia
Europe’s tragedy — and it is genuinely tragic — is that it spent two years after Russia’s Ukraine invasion congratulating itself on diversification while not actually completing it. Gas storage went into the 2025–2026 winter at dangerous levels. Long-term LNG contract structures were renegotiated upward at the worst possible moment. The continent is now bidding against Asia for every available cargo on the spot market at prices that are genuinely destabilising.
Australia’s decision to negotiate supply agreements bilaterally — not just with Singapore but reportedly with Brunei, China, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, and South Korea — reflects a hard-won lesson from Europe’s misadventure: energy resilience is relational, not just infrastructural. Pipes and terminals matter, but so does the phone call at 3 a.m. when a chokepoint closes. Australia has spent four years building those relationships; it is now cashing them in.
As Australian Assistant Foreign Affairs Minister Matt Thistlethwaite put it: “We’ve got that advantage in that we can work with our neighbours in the Asia-Pacific to ensure that they have access to their energy needs and we get access to ours.” The Diplomat That is, in essence, the diplomatic theory of the LNG diesel supply chain security Singapore-Australia agreement: Canberra’s natural gas wealth is being converted into political insurance, denominated in refined fuel.
Why This Model Could Become the Template for Indo-Pacific Energy Diplomacy
Beyond the Free Trade Agreement — A New Class of Instrument
The standard toolkit of bilateral trade diplomacy — tariff schedules, most-favoured-nation status, investor protection clauses — was designed for a world where supply disruptions were rare, short, and solvable by price signals. The 2026 Hormuz crisis has exposed that assumption as dangerously complacent.
What the Singapore–Australia agreement proposes is something genuinely novel: a crisis-contingent preferential supply protocol, embedded within an FTA architecture but explicitly activated under conditions of global disruption. The Australia–Singapore Economic Resilience Dialogue, co-chaired at senior official level, gives this framework an institutional nervous system — a standing mechanism for early consultation and coordinated response rather than improvised crisis management.
This is the architecture Europe wishes it had built with its LNG suppliers after 2022. It is the architecture Japan and South Korea are now, belatedly, also pursuing. South Korea holds about 3.5 million tons of LNG and Japan around 4.4 million tons in reserves — enough for roughly two to four weeks of stable demand, CNBC a buffer that a single disrupted cargo schedule can obliterate. Bilateral resilience protocols of the Singapore–Australia variety provide the diplomatic scaffolding around which physical stockpile strategies must now be built.
Trusted Supply Lines: The New Competitive Advantage
Wong’s phrase — “trusted supply lines” — is going to echo through energy ministries across the Indo-Pacific for years. The word choice is deliberate. Trusted is not cheap or close or abundant. It is a relational category, not a logistical one. And in a global energy market being restructured by geopolitical conflict, relational trust is becoming the scarce commodity.
Wong was explicit: “We do not plan to restrict exports. We didn’t have to do so even in the darkest days of COVID and we will not do so during this energy crisis. I am confident that Australia and Singapore will not just get through the crisis, but we will emerge stronger and more resilient.” The Daily Advertiser That is a political commitment of the first order — a small city-state with no hinterland, surrounded by a global disruption, choosing not to hoard. It is worth more than any contract clause.
Data Snapshot: The Interdependence That Makes This Pact Work
| Flow | Volume | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Australia → Singapore (LNG) | ~39.4% of Singapore’s LNG supply (2024) | Singapore’s largest single LNG source |
| Singapore → Australia (refined fuels) | >26% of Australia’s total fuel imports | Australia’s largest refined fuel supplier |
| Singapore → Australia (petrol) | >50% of Australia’s petrol intake | Critical for road and agricultural sectors |
| Global LNG through Hormuz | ~20% of global LNG trade | Now disrupted; Qatar’s Ras Laffan offline |
| Brent crude peak (April 2026) | $141.26/barrel (April 2 high) | 18-year high; compressing refinery margins |
The numbers tell a story of mutual exposure that makes this deal not merely politically desirable but economically unavoidable. Both economies would suffer severely without each other’s supply; the pact simply converts that mutual dependence into a formal and enforceable commitment.
Forward Look: Three Bold Predictions
First: The Singapore–Australia protocol will be concluded within 90 days and will serve as the explicit template for at least two additional bilateral energy resilience agreements in the Indo-Pacific — most likely involving Japan and either South Korea or New Zealand — by the end of 2026. The institutional architecture of the Economic Resilience Dialogue is designed to be replicated.
Second: The Hormuz crisis will accelerate Australia’s long-stalled domestic refining debate. Having 80% of your liquid fuel supply dependent on overseas refiners — however trusted — is a structural vulnerability that no bilateral agreement can fully paper over. Expect a serious federal government investment framework for domestic refining capacity to emerge within 18 months, framed explicitly as national security infrastructure.
Third: China is watching this closely and will not be idle. Beijing already enjoys de facto preferential passage through the Strait for its tankers. If it perceives that a Singapore–Australia–Japan energy axis is forming along security-aligned lines, it will accelerate its own bilateral energy lock-in arrangements with alternative suppliers — deepening the global energy bifurcation that began in 2022 and is now accelerating at pace. The Indo-Pacific energy security agreement between Wong and Albanese is not just a supply pact. It is an early data point in the restructuring of the global energy order.
Conclusion: A Small Pact With a Very Large Shadow
There is something almost anachronistic about two democracies in 2026 sitting down together and saying, plainly, that they will keep trade flowing — that they will not weaponise energy in the way that others have. It is the kind of statement that would have seemed unremarkable in 2015. Today it feels almost radical.
The Singapore–Australia LNG and diesel agreement signed at the Istana is, in its immediate terms, a sensible and well-constructed piece of crisis diplomacy. In its deeper terms, it is a proof of concept: that trusted bilateral relationships, properly institutionalised, can serve as genuine shock absorbers in a world where the multilateral system is fraying and chokepoints are being used as weapons.
PM Wong called it a “simple but critical principle.” He is right on both counts. Simple principles, rigidly held under pressure, are often the most valuable ones. And right now, in a global energy market that has been turned upside down in six weeks, the principle that allies keep their promises to each other may be the most critical thing the Indo-Pacific has.
The rest of the world’s energy ministers should take note — and consider what it would mean to have nobody to call when their own Hormuz moment arrives.
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