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Is an economic crisis getting closer?
🔥 A barrel of crude oil is quietly detonating East Asia
The ripples from the Strait of Hormuz have already reached East Asia's coastline.
The Middle East is in turmoil, and the bill has been sent to Tokyo, Seoul, and Beijing—
These three places share one common characteristic: severe dependence on imported energy, producing not a single drop of oil themselves, yet maintaining the world's densest manufacturing clusters~
Every dollar the oil price rises, East Asia's trade balance looks worse by a notch.
Chain reactions are already underway:
Energy import costs surge → Trade deficits widen → Domestic currency pressures and depreciates → Import-driven inflation returns → Central banks in a tight spot → Capital flight risks quietly emerge
Japan just announced its largest overseas asset selloff in nearly a decade, the Korean won and Japanese yen exchange rates are already on thin ice, and the yuan is also quietly bearing external pressure.
What's more troubling is the timing—
All of this is hitting the same window where global recession probability is at record highs, US Treasury yields are soaring, and Federal Reserve rate hike expectations are rekindling.
East Asian economies were originally waiting for an easing cycle to catch their breath
Instead, what the Middle East handed over is a barrel of oil~
Geopolitical risks have never been just a Middle East problem; oil prices are the common bill left for everyone by globalization~