Photo gallery: FIS Singapore 25

Sponsored Content

Leave a Comment

The world in flux and Trump’s role in a new equilibrium

The world in flux and Trump’s role in a new equilibrium

The second Trump administration has so far brought a lot of things: market shocks, volatile trade policies, and turbulent foreign relationships. But beyond the chaos, renowned geopolitics expert Stephen Kotkin says Trump has an unwitting role to help the world rebalance and reach a “new equilibrium” in the global order.

Sort content by

Why the energy transition won’t die with Trump 2.0

Despite the uptick in anti-ESG sentiment that’s come with Donald Trump’s return to the White House, large institutional investors are certain that innovations in transition technology will continue and that the broader world has not changed course on the journey to decarbonisation.  

How Asia-Pacific investors can navigate Trump’s America first plan

President Trump is dramatically reshaping geopolitics, creating new risks and opportunities for investors across the Asia-Pacific.

How new technologies are changing the game in private markets

With the ability to uncover hard-to-find information and enable more frequent trading in traditionally illiquid asset classes, new technologies like artificial intelligence and tokenisation could be the biggest disruption most private markets investors will see in their lifetime. 

How capital markets became a weapon of choice in great power conflict

Capital markets continue to be a key battlefield of power between Beijing and Washington, and whether the yuan has a serious chance of taking over the dollar as the international currency is the next big question for the world economic order. 

Investors brace for life after the US dollar 

A world where the US dollar is no longer the reserve currency seems increasingly likely by the day, and institutional investors are wary that it could fundamentally change the way they construct portfolios. 

Future of Asia now ‘a more difficult story’ as multilateralism crumbles

The global environment in which small Asian economies have thrived over the past seven decades is being dismantled as the US retreats as an advocate of multilateralism, globalisation and internationalism, warned leading geopolitics academic and economist Danny Quah.