In early April 2026, global financial markets experienced a strong rebound after intense turbulence. This market frenzy, triggered by the easing of Middle East tensions, appeared to inject a shot in the arm for the global economy, but in reality, it exposed deeper structural contradictions. The epic surge in Asia-Pacific stock markets on April 1, coupled with the subsequent strength in European and U.S. markets, is essentially a short-term phenomenon of unwinding geopolitical risk premiums. Yet, persistently high energy prices and the intensifying risk of stagflation in Europe are tearing apart the facade of this "illusory prosperity."
The market rebound triggered by ceasefire signals from the Middle East is fundamentally a distortion in the pricing mechanism of risk assets. When the U.S. and Iran signaled a truce, crude oil futures prices plummeted by 8.7% in a single day, directly boosting global risk appetite. However, this asset repricing based on geopolitical gaming ignores fundamental changes in the energy market's supply-demand dynamics. The OPEC+ alliance, led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, continues to strictly implement production cuts, while the U.S. shale oil industry faces sluggish capacity recovery due to environmental policies, and global crude oil inventories remain at five-year lows. Under this supply-demand mismatch, the price correction driven by geopolitical easing has instead created an opportunity for speculative capital to build positions at lower levels—open interest in crude oil futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange surged by 23% during the rebound, indicating that market expectations for sustained high energy prices remain unchanged.
European economies are trapped in a vicious cycle of stagflation. The eurozone's CPI rose by 6.8% year-on-year in March, exceeding the European Central Bank's target range for 18 consecutive months, while the manufacturing PMI fell to 47.3, remaining in contraction territory for 11 consecutive months. This combination of "high inflation + low growth" stems from the dual failure of energy price transmission mechanisms and monetary policy space. Industrial electricity prices in Germany have risen by 142% compared to 2023, directly driving up costs in basic industries such as chemicals and metallurgy, leading to a 1.2% month-on-month decline in German industrial output in March. More critically, the European Central Bank has lost independent monetary policy space amid the Federal Reserve's ongoing rate-hiking cycle, with the euro falling to a historic low of 1.03 against the dollar, further exacerbating imported inflationary pressures. In this policy dilemma, Goldman Sachs has lowered its eurozone economic growth forecast for 2026 from 1.8% to 1.1%, while raising its inflation forecast to 5.9%.
The global asset pricing system faces the risk of systemic restructuring. The traditional framework of using "Treasury yields as the risk-free benchmark" is unraveling, as the spread between the 10-year Treasury yield and inflation expectations (the real yield) remains negative, signaling a lack of confidence in long-term growth. This uncertainty is particularly evident in equity markets: although the S&P 500's price-to-earnings ratio has fallen from its peak to 22 times, it remains above the 20-year average of 18 times, while corporate earnings growth expectations have been cut from 8% to 3%. More alarmingly, the share of U.S. dollars in global foreign exchange reserves has fallen to 58%, the lowest since 1995, while the share of gold reserves has risen to 15%, the highest since 2012, reflecting central banks' deep concerns about the stability of the monetary system.
The growing pains of energy transition and geopolitical gaming are creating a resonance effect. The European Union aims to increase the share of renewable energy to 45% by 2030, but currently, 90% of photovoltaic modules rely on imports from China, and 70% of key components for wind power equipment come from Asian supply chains. This combination of transition dependence and geopolitical risks has led to a 300% increase in energy market volatility compared to 2019. Germany's suspension of North Sea wind power project approvals in March and France's restart of nuclear power plant construction essentially reflect a rebalancing between energy security and transition costs. The predicament faced by developing countries is even more severe: data from the African Development Bank shows that 43% of the population in sub-Saharan Africa still lacks reliable electricity supply, and the cost of energy transition accounts for as high as 5.7% of GDP, far exceeding the 1.2% in advanced economies.
Looking back from the vantage point of 2026, this market rebound triggered by geopolitical easing is merely a brief respite from the global economy's structural contradictions. The supply-demand mismatch in energy markets, the policy dilemma of central banks, the crumbling faith in asset pricing, and the geopolitical amplification of transition pains—these deep-seated contradictions will not disappear because of a temporary improvement in risk appetite. When the market awakens from the fog of geopolitics, what awaits may be a more severe test of stagflation—this is perhaps the most concerning economic truth behind this financial frenzy.
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