๐ What the markets just told us
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Todayโs briefing: |
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Good morning Intriguer. Somehow itโs already August, and 2025 has simultaneously felt like the longest and shortest year yet.
While some of us are lapping up the endless Euro summer content that continues to trickle through online, others are already prepping their flannel shirts and licking their lips for that first sip of pumpkin spice latte for fall.
In geopolitics, itโs the time when folks quietly prep/panic for the September high-level meets like UNGA, and take stock of the marketโs performance in the first half of the year. Weโll take you through some highlights of that in todayโs briefing.

Number of the day
16,000ย
Thatโs how many hectares Franceโs ongoing wildfire has now burnt, its biggest since 1949.
Mid-year market check-in

Itโs early August, aka earnings season, aka that time when the massive corporations running our military, insurance, and meme machines offer a sneak peek at Q2 earnings.ย
So, whatโs the big end of town telling us six months into the year?
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โIn the United States, the most consequential country in the West, it is the culture that enables companies like ours to come into existenceโand excel. It must be protected.โ โ Alexander Karp, CEO, Palantir
As our spooked world races to re-arm, defence primes are clearly poised to profit help: players like Lockheed and Raytheon (now going full KFC with its โRTXโ rebrand) won billions in contracts on a single sunny day in July, selling hit products like the F-35 jet.ย
But a whole new generation of start-ups like Anduril, Helsing, and Shield AI can now notch up serious valuations on a bet they can bring Silicon Valleyโs disruptive spirit to the Beltway. Palantir alone just signed a $10B contract pumping the US Army full of AI.
Thereโs a running joke that nobody knows what Palantir actually does, but whatever it does, the markets are loving it: the Denver-based firm has doubled its valuation this year.
And Karp, Palantirโs curly-haired chief, doesnโt just issue bold powerpoints pledging to, you know, increase revenues and lower costs. Rather, like a Larry Fink or a Jamie Dimon, he likes to weigh in on the big, philosophical, and geopolitical questions of our age.
In his latest update, for example, Karp argues, โthe United States is notโฆ a soft compromise and amalgam of global values and tastes.โ Rather, he says the US has always thrived by maintaining a strong, distinct identity in the face of competition. Implicit (and occasionally explicit) in his message is a fear this identity might be fading.ย ย
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โWeโve had significant inflation in our international markets, particularly in Europeโฆ primarily itโs a supply issue.โย โ Chris Kemczynski, CEO,ย McDonaldโs
We found the McDonaldโs update intriguing for two reasons. Okay three if you include that we love a good Quarter Pounderยฎ with Cheeseโข as much as the next ex-diplomatยฉ.
But first, itโs interesting for what it says about US households, particularly because the companyโs whole vibe is to stay accessible for everyone, always. And yep, the CEO says heโs noticed lower-income folks are visiting less, despite new items to offset inflation (a challenge heโs highlighted since 2020). Other income brackets are now spending more.
But second, you know what Kemczynski didnโt flag this week? Anti-US sentiment. Itโs hard to think of a brand more closely linked to โMurica. Thatโs why, just in Q1, he was flagging big upticks in anti-US sentiment across Europe and Canada.
Now in Q2? Not even a mention. For Q1 he already flagged the inoculating effects of decades of localisation (you can get a McAloo Tikki in India, for example). So one challenge (sentiment) now seems more manageable than the other (macro conditions).
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โAnd so we're going to be doing โ we're doing more in this country, and that's on top of having roughly 19 billion chips coming out of the U.S. now, and we will do more.โ โ Tim Cook, CEO, Appleย
Speech experts in the intelligence community often scrutinise world leader footage for any hints of stress. And maybe theyโd flag the kind of minor word-jumble above as reflecting the pressure Appleโs chief is now feeling, as he steers the worldโs third-biggest company through a trade war between the worldโs two-biggest economies, all while his firm cops criticism for its relatively slow and cautious approach to AI.
So it was interesting to hear Cook confirm that most iPhones sold in the US are now indeed made in India (rather than China), while iPhones sold everywhere else are mostly made in China. Thatโs a perfect example of how firms with global footprints and brands can optimise their supply chains to manage local political risk while still hitting targets.
But lest that logistical pirouette look too cute for any DC hawks, Cook backed up yesterday by re-upping his US investments, pledging another $100B for a total of $600B over four years, because given the stakes, why not go back and wring the towel a bit more.
Intrigueโs Take
Since we founded Intrigue (2020), geopolitics has gone from some niche line item for nerds, to the top risk getting flagged by CEOs. And todayโs briefing offers hints into how some of the most effective leaders are responding.
First, top CEOs arenโt just responding to politics, so much as actively hustling to shape it. And that means not just hitching a ride on Air Force One to the Gulf, but using every public utterance to strategically shape public debate, which leads us toโฆ
Second, top CEOs are now cosplaying as philosophers-in-chief, going beyond, you know, exhortations to lift revenue and cut costs, to instead weigh in on moral, strategic, and even civilizational questions. And they do that by framing their firms not just as economic actors, but as guardians of values. But to succeed in these first twoโฆ
Third, top CEOs also ensure their global firms stay nationally relevant. That McAloo in India isnโt just a gimmick or even a line item, but an inoculation against populist pushback: weโre not globalist elites or American imperialists, but a locally-owned franchise living right next door.
Oh, and itโs not just burgers. Those defence primes and start-ups have similar (if less tasty) localisation strategies across the West, highlighting local talent, input, and ideas.
We continue to marvel that some of the best diplomacy right now is in the private sector.
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Meanwhile, elsewhereโฆ

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๐บ๐ธย UNITED STATES –ย Big day. |
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๐ฎ๐ฑย ISRAEL –ย Decision time. Comment:ย Netanyahu is absorbing several risks here, including a) to the hostages (the IDF will enter areas where theyโre believed to be held), b) local civilians already mired in a humanitarian crisis, c) Israelโs already-damaged standing, and d) Israelโs own security (the IDF chief of staff reportedly warned Netanyahu heโs walking into a trap). But President Trump reportedly wonโt object to the Israeli proposal, with aides telling Axios the president was moved by the latest Hamas proof-of-life videos. |
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๐ช๐ธย SPAIN – Buy local. ย Comment: Spainโs single pivot kills several birds, whether maximising European capabilities, or curbing costs and US dependencies (the US had to quash rumours of an F-35 โkill switchโ). But paired with Spainโs refusal to match NATOโs 5% spending target, it also sends a message of strategic autonomy to DC. Of course, it comes with costs, too: absent any F-35s, Spainโs navy loses its carrier-based strike capability once its Harriers retire from 2030. |
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๐ง๐ฉย BANGLADESH – Save the date. ย |
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๐ง๐ทย BRAZIL – Stay home. ย |
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๐ธ๐ฉย SUDAN – Under siege. ย Comment: Almost two decades have passed since Clooney made that documentary trying to shine a light on Darfur, but the atrocities continue. |
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๐ฒ๐ณย MONGOLIA – Joint riches. ย Comment: Why would cashed-up Oman and land-locked Mongolia do this? The Omanis are trying to diversify their oil and gas billions into new markets and sectors, while the Mongolians need capital to develop their vast mineral deposits. |
Extra Intrigue
In other worldsโฆ
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Environment: Canadian authorities have blamed a bird that dropped a fish on power lines for sparking a wildfire.ย
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Architecture: The Italian parliament has approved $16B to build the worldโs longest suspension bridge linking Sicily to the mainland.
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Art: Auction house Sothebyโs has returned a set of ancient Buddhist gemstones to India after government pressure and lengthy negotiations.
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TV show of the day
Courtesy of Zero Day Cultural and Creative Co
Two back-to-back Intrigue TV recommendations this week?!ย
While yesterdayโs tip was all about Korean espionage, today weโre onto cross-Strait tensions with Taiwanโs hot new war drama, Zero Day Attack. Set in 2028 after Taiwanโs next presidential elections, it tells the story of a mainland invasion, leveraging expert insights to feature plausible scenarios like disinformation, turncoats, and jamming.ย
Each of its ten episodes is directed by a different local film-maker, looking at the (speculative fiction) war from a different perspective. Itโs already streaming in Taiwan and has a Japanese release from next week. As for the rest of us? Still TBC.
Anyway, the most intriguing part for us is this drama is partly funded by the Taiwanese government, in hopes of building public awareness and resilience. Others (including Chinaโs defence ministry) are criticising the series as fearmongering.
Todayโs poll
What do you think global CEOs should focus on most these days? |
Yesterdayโs poll: How do you think this Trump-Modi standoff will play out?
โ๏ธ India will curb its Russian oil purchases (26%)
๐ข๏ธ India will keep buying Russian oil (72%)
โ๏ธ Other (write in!) (1%)
Your two cents:
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๐ข๏ธ R.C.O: โExports to the US are only 1.8% of India's GDP, and Modi needs cheap fuel to satisfy his populist base.โ
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โ๏ธ I.P: โIndia may be willing to make the trade-off and curb its Russian oil purchases in the short term, but if it's playing the long game it will also make some sort of concession to Russia to keep open avenues for BRICS cooperation.โ
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โ๏ธ A.S: โCountries will be cautious on trade deals since they rely on the US, until they no longer need to. The short view of tariffs might be good today, but the long tail risks are going to be hard to repair.โ










