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Hormuz Blockade Could Deepen World’s Worst Energy Crisis and Risk a Dangerous Misstep Published: 14 April 2026

  • President Donald Trump ordered a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz on Sunday, April 12, 2026, dimming hopes for a quick end to the conflict and escalating a standoff with Iran that has already triggered the worst energy shock in history. The blockade, which targets vessels of all nations entering or departing Iranian ports and coastal areas, took effect on Monday, April 13, 2026.
  • Tanker traffic through the strait ground to a halt within hours of the announcement, reversing a gradual recovery seen after a two-week ceasefire, with at least two vessels turning back. Crude oil surged as investors scrambled to price in tighter supply, with US WTI futures rising more than 8% and Brent crude over 7% to $101.86.
  • Before the conflict, roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil passed through the Strait of Hormuz. However, the flow has since slowed to a trickle, upending supply chains for oil, fertilisers, apparel and industrial goods. Analysts have warned that clearing the backlog could take weeks even after a resolution.
  • A full blockade would further tighten the squeeze on global supply, with analysts warning oil prices could rise to around $150 per barrel. Commodity prices for fertiliser and helium, critical inputs for food production and semiconductor manufacturing, are likely to keep climbing, fanning inflation that is already accelerating.
  • The blockade risks drawing major economies into the conflict, particularly China and India, as a blanket ban on tankers carrying Iranian crude threatens to cut off supply flows. Further, it could potentially reignite geopolitical tensions and expose countries with safe-passage arrangements to the crossfire.
  • While some analysts view the blockade as a negotiating tactic within ongoing U.S.-Iran talks, others warn it carries significant downside risks, including military escalation, legal challenges under international law, and prolonged supply disruptions, with the potential to trigger an energy shock comparable to or worse than the 1970s oil crisis.

(Source: CNBC)

IMF, World Bank, IEA Urge Countries to Stop Hoarding Energy Supplies Published: 14 April 2026

  • The International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank, and International Energy Agency (IEA) on Monday urged countries to avoid hoarding energy supplies and imposing export controls, warning this could worsen the biggest shock ever to the global energy market.
  • IEA chief, Fatih Birol, said several countries were holding onto stocks and imposing export restrictions, and appealed to all countries to let energy stocks flow to the markets. He stressed that energy supplies should be allowed to flow to markets, while IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva urged countries to “do no harm,” warning such actions would worsen disequilibrium.
  • Birol also noted during an Atlantic Council event that the U.S. military blockade of ships leaving Iran’s ports, which began on Monday, could exacerbate the worst global energy disruption ever. With more than 80 oil and gas facilities damaged, and prices for oil, gas, and fertiliser rising, concerns about food security, job losses, and broader economic strain are mounting.
  • Officials warned that no country is immune, with the impact expected to be more severe for regions already facing supply concerns, particularly in Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and small island economies.
  • The IEA chief noted that while he hopes another oil stockpile release is not needed, the agency was ready to act if the energy shock from the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran requires it. The 32-member IEA agreed ​last month to release 400 Mn barrels of oil from reserves, the largest-ever coordinated release, in ​a bid to calm oil markets. 

(Source: Reuters)

Jamaica Opens Incubator to Help BPOs Gain Traction Published: 10 April 2026

  • Jamaica’s Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) sector has grown steadily despite occasional setbacks from hurricanes. The country is now the largest BPO hub in the Caribbean, employing between 40,000 and 50,000 people and generating close to $1Bn in annual revenue. The total workspace dedicated to BPO operations across the island has expanded to more than three million square feet, according to the government data.
  • Considering this, the government is now focused on moving the industry up the value chain, from basic voice support to higher-skilled services such as data analytics, compliance monitoring, complex customer engagement, and knowledge-based processing. At the launch of the Informatics Park Incubator, a plug-and-play facility[1], Delano Seiveright, Minister of State for Industry and Commerce, emphasised this shift.
  • Jamaica is also strengthening its infrastructure and regulations. The country has adopted global PCI-DSS standards for payment security, and its Data Protection Act includes several key elements of Europe’s GDPR. These measures have allowed Jamaican BPOs to handle sensitive work such as Anti-Money Laundering (AML) monitoring and Know Your Customer (KYC) processes.
  • A similar upgrade is happening in healthcare outsourcing. The government has started training workers in ICD-11 medical coding, and some local BPOs are now managing revenue cycle operations for U.S. hospitals, from patient registration to final claims processing. Training is also expanding into telehealth support and care management for chronic conditions.
  • Workforce development programmes, supported by the HEART/NSTA Trust, are likely to create a steady pipeline of trained talent in medical office administration and digital health services. This allows companies that start small in the incubator to grow quickly into larger, specialised operations.
  • Jamaica’s push into higher-value BPO services positions it to capture more resilient, higher-margin contracts globally. However, this strategy remains vulnerable to external risks such as increased competition from lower-cost or more technologically advanced markets. Tightening data privacy regulations in key client regions and rapid automation/artificial intelligence (AI) adoption could also reduce demand for mid-skill outsourcing roles unless workforce upskilling keeps pace.

(Sources: Nearshore Americas & NCBCM Research)

 

[1] As the name “plug-and-play” suggests, companies can move in, connect to ready-made infrastructure, and start working almost immediately, without spending months on setup.

Jamaica after Hurricane Melissa: Building Resilience through Disaster Risk Financing Published: 10 April 2026

  • Jamaica’s economy has been hit by external headwinds over the last 12 months, but the largest shock was Hurricane Melissa (October 28, 2025), the most extreme tropical system to make landfall in the country’s history, with estimated damage and losses of 56.7% of GDP, comparable to Hurricane Gilbert in 1988.
  • Hurricane Melissa was one of the most devastating storms ever to hit Jamaica, significantly more intense than Gilbert, highlighting the country’s increasing exposure to severe natural hazard events.
  • In response, Jamaica’s 2022 Disaster Risk Financing (DRF) policy introduced a comprehensive framework to address relief, recovery, and reconstruction across both high-frequency and low-frequency events. The framework is also based on the concept of ‘risk layering’, meaning that different levels of risk are covered by different financial instruments, with each instrument designed to be best suited to the risk it is intended to address. As such, resilience has been built through a comprehensive disaster risk financing strategy.
  • This framework made available US$662Mn in government resources for immediate recovery, later increased to over US$1.07Bn with International Monetary Fund (IMF) support (US$415Mn in January 2026), helping to address urgent needs such as medical attention, shelters, food security, and restoration of energy, water, and transport.
  •  Additional instruments, including the US$150Mn catastrophe bond (2024–2027), which was fully triggered by Melissa, demonstrate proactive financial preparedness, even though total damages (approximately US$12.2Bn) far exceeded the current available resources of US$1.08Bn.
  • While recovery will take several years, Jamaica’s strong track record of fiscal management and pre-arranged financing mechanisms have been critical in enabling a rapid response, supporting recovery efforts, and strengthening long-term resilience to extreme natural disasters.

(Source: Inter-American Development Bank)

CariCRIS Upgrades the Credit Ratings of the Government of Barbados to CariBBB+ Published: 10 April 2026

  • Caribbean Information and Credit Rating Services Limited (CariCRIS) has upgraded its Regional Scale Local Currency (LC) and Foreign Currency (FC) Ratings for the Government of Barbados (GOB) by one-notch to CariBBB+. The ratings indicate that the level of creditworthiness of this obligor, adjudged in relation to other obligors in the Caribbean is adequate.
  • The one-notch upgrade reflects strengthening across key macroeconomic and policy pillars, including income and economic structure, fiscal policy, monetary/exchange rate management, external sector strength, and political stability.
  • Key drivers of the rating improvement include a continued decline in the debt-to-GDP ratio, which fell to 94.6% in December 2025 from 97.2% a year earlier, supported by sustained fiscal consolidation efforts. Economic growth remains strong and broad-based, driven mainly by tourism, business services, and construction activity, while tourism performance continues to exceed pre-pandemic levels with record long-stay arrivals supporting foreign exchange earnings.
  • In addition, the successful completion of the IMF Extended Fund Facility programme has further strengthened policy credibility and enabled access to additional IMF support through the Resilience and Sustainability Trust. Fiscal performance has also improved, with the primary balance increasing to 4.0% of GDP in FY 2024/25, exceeding expectations, while external buffers remain strong, with gross international reserves providing more than six months of import cover and supporting external debt servicing capacity.
  • CariCRIS maintains a stable outlook, expecting continued fiscal discipline (primary surpluses above 3%) and moderate growth to support debt reduction over the medium term. Positive rating triggers include a reduction in debt below 85% of GDP (currently at 93.3%), which would signal further strengthening of the sovereign balance sheet, as well as sustained fiscal surpluses above 3% of GDP over the next 12 months, which would reinforce the medium-term debt reduction trajectory.
  • Negative rating risks include import cover falling below 12 weeks without credible sources of external reserve replenishment, delays in tourism-related investment projects scheduled for 2026 that could weaken growth prospects. It also includes slippage in the implementation of the Barbados Economic Reform and Transformation (BERT) 2026 programme that could undermine fiscal consolidation, and a sustained deterioration in the fiscal balance that weakens the primary surplus and slows progress toward debt reduction targets.

(Source: CariCRIS)

Venezuela's Refineries Down to 31% of Crude Processing Capacity Published: 10 April 2026

  • Venezuela’s refining network is operating well below capacity, processing around 399,000 barrels per day (bpd), or roughly 31% of its 1.29 million-bpd installed capacity, marking a decline from about 35% in February as state-owned oil and gas company of Venezuela Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PDVSA) continues to struggle with maintaining stable operations after restarting multiple units.
  • This weaker performance comes despite a gradual recovery in oil production and exports following a supply agreement with the U.S. earlier in the year. However, persistent constraints, including unreliable electricity supply, frequent power outages, and the need for extensive maintenance and repairs across ageing infrastructure, continue to limit the country’s ability to restore refining activity to higher levels.
  • PDVSA has recently focused on restarting key fuel-processing units across its refinery network, but operational reliability remains weak. In particular, several fluid catalytic cracking units, which are critical for converting crude into higher-value fuels like gasoline, have been unable to run continuously, leading to unstable output and limiting overall refining efficiency.
  • At the Paraguana Refining Centre, the country’s largest facility with a capacity of about 955,000 bpd, four crude distillation units are currently active and processing approximately 237,000 bpd of oil. However, only one fluid catalytic cracking unit is in operation, highlighting significant downstream bottlenecks that constrain fuel output despite crude throughput.
  • At the Puerto la Cruz refinery, two crude distillation units are operating and processing about 82,000 bpd, while at the smaller El Palito refinery, one crude unit is active, processing roughly 80,000 bpd, alongside a single operational catalytic cracking unit. These partial operations reflect a broader pattern of intermittent functionality across the refining system rather than sustained recovery.
  • Despite this limited recovery, Venezuela continues to face recurring risks of domestic fuel shortages, a problem that has historically led to long queues at petrol stations during periods of tight supply. To mitigate these constraints, PDVSA has been importing naphtha under U.S. authorisations to help blend and supplement domestic fuel production, underscoring continued dependence on external inputs to stabilise fuel supply.

(Source: Reuters)

US Fourth-Quarter GDP Growth Revised Lower To A 0.5% Rate Published: 10 April 2026

  • U.S. economic growth slowed more than previously estimated in the fourth quarter amid downgrades to business investment, including inventory accumulation, but corporate profits increased ​sharply, government data showed.
  • Gross domestic product (GDP) increased at a downwardly ‌revised 0.5% annualised rate, the Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis said in its third GDP estimate. The economy was previously reported to have grown at a 0.7% pace in the fourth quarter. The advance estimate had put GDP growth at 1.4%.
  • Revisions to the fourth quarter's growth pace reflected downgrades to business spending ​on intellectual products as well as inventories. Growth in consumer spending, which accounts for more ​than two-thirds of the economy, was revised down to a 1.9% pace from the previously reported 2.0% rate.
  • Last year's shutdown of the government was the key driver of the slowdown from the ​third quarter's 4.4% growth pace. Neither the third- nor fourth-quarter GDP readings is a true reflection of the economy's health. Final sales to private domestic purchasers, which exclude government, trade and inventories, grew ‌at ⁠a 1.8% pace in the fourth quarter. This measure of domestic demand, closely watched by policymakers, was previously estimated to have increased at a 1.9% rate. Domestic demand grew at a 2.9% pace in the July-September quarter.
  • Profits from current production increased at ​a rate of $246.9 ​billion in the ⁠fourth quarter, surging from a $175.6 billion growth pace in the third quarter. When measured from the income side, the economy grew at ​a 2.6% rate in the fourth quarter. Gross domestic income (GDI) increased ​at a ⁠3.5% pace in the July-September quarter.
  • The average of GDP and GDI, also referred to as gross domestic output and considered a better measure of economic activity, grew at ⁠a 1.5% ​rate. Gross domestic output grew at a 4.0% ​rate in the third quarter. Though growth likely picked up in the first quarter, the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran ​is casting a cloud over the economy.

(Source: Reuters)

 

US PCE Inflation Picks Up in February, Consumer Spending Solid Published: 10 April 2026

  • U.S. inflation increased as expected in February and likely rose further in March amid the war with Iran, a trend that is expected to discourage the Federal Reserve from cutting interest rates for a while. The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index ​climbed 0.4% after an unrevised 0.3 gain in January, the Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) said ‌on Thursday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the PCE price index rising 0.4%.
  • In the 12 months through February, PCE inflation advanced 2.8% after increasing by the same margin in January.
  • The BEA is still catching up on data releases following delays caused by last year's government ​shutdown. Inflation was already elevated before the war, largely because of President Donald Trump's import duties. The U.S.-Israel ​war with Iran boosted global oil prices and sent the national average gasoline retail price soaring ⁠above $4 per gallon for the first time in more than three years.
  • Economists expect the inflation fallout from the ​conflict, which started at the end of February, would be more pronounced in March's data. Trump on Tuesday announced a ​two-week ceasefire on condition of Tehran reopening the blockaded Strait of Hormuz, which has also affected shipments of fertilisers and other goods. The disruptions are expected to raise food prices.
  • Excluding the volatile food and energy components, the PCE price index increased 0.4% in February, rising by the same ​margin for a third straight month. In the 12 months through February, core PCE inflation advanced 3.0% following a ​3.1% increase in January.
  • The slowdown in year-on-year core PCE inflation reflected last year's high readings dropping out of the calculation.

(Source: Reuters)

UK Oil Firm Sees Potential 7 Billion-Barrel Oil Find In Jamaican Waters Published: 09 April 2026

  • A UK-based oil and gas exploration company says new offshore testing in Jamaican waters has identified hydrocarbons that could signal the presence of petroleum beneath the seabed.
  • United Oil & Gas plc (UOG) announced on Wednesday that it has completed analysis of seabed samples collected from the Walton-Morant Licence, an area long considered to hold potential oil and gas reserves.  The company said the results mark an important step toward determining whether offshore drilling could eventually take place.
  • During its recent Seabed Geochemical Exploration (SGE) survey, UOG has undertaken a geochemical analysis on the 42 piston cores acquired across the Walton-Morant Licence. The analysis has identified C4 and C5 hydrocarbons, including butanes and pentanes, in select piston cores within the headspace gas dataset. The Walton-Morant licence could contain approximately 7 billion barrels of prospective resources, though this represents potential rather than confirmed reserves.
  • These higher order hydrocarbons are not typically associated with biogenic gas systems and are therefore consistent with a potential thermogenic contribution. This distinction is significant because thermogenic hydrocarbons are more commonly linked to oil and gas deposits, whereas biogenic gas usually forms closer to the surface and is less likely to indicate large-scale petroleum resources.
  • There is an established body of evidence for an active petroleum system in Jamaica in general, and on the licence in particular, including repeat satellite slick anomalies, thermogenic hydrocarbon geochemistry from existing onshore and offshore wells, onshore and offshore oil seeps, and onshore surface outcrops.
  • Furthermore, petroleum systems modelling suggests the presence of oil-mature source rocks. The 2026 SGE survey is the first on the licence to be optimally positioned using 3D seismic, multibeam echosounder (MBES) seabed mapping, and satellite-derived slick anomaly data.
  • Taken together, the data are interpreted as consistent with an active petroleum system offshore Jamaica.

(Sources: United Oil and Gas PLC and Caribbean National Weekly)

 

Guyana Earns Record US$761M in Oil Revenue in Q1 2026 Published: 09 April 2026

  • Guyana has earned over US$761Mn in the first three months of 2026, marking its highest quarterly earnings on record since production activities commenced in December 2019.
  • According to the petroleum receipts, earnings were supported by 10 profit oil payments made between December 30, 2025, and March 31, 2026, along with one royalty payment relating to 2025 fourth quarter production amounting to US$110.89Mn, as oil prices remained above US$100 per barrel.
  • Total profit oil payments during the quarter reached US$650.82Mn, while overall inflows into the Natural Resource Fund, including profit oil and royalty, amounted to US$761.72Mn, reflecting strong revenue inflows under elevated oil price conditions.
  • Under the 2016 Petroleum Agreement, Guyana receives 2% royalty and 12.5% of profit oil, while 75% is deducted by ExxonMobil for cost recovery, after which the remaining balance of crude oil is shared equally (50/50) between the Government and the Contractor, in line with Article 11 provisions.
  • Production remains robust, with four Floating Production Storage and Offloading vessels (FPSOs) in the Stabroek Block producing a combined ~916,000 barrels per day (bpd), including Liza One (~130,000 bpd), Liza Unity (~265,000 bpd), Prosperity (~265,000 bpd), and One Guyana (~260,000 bpd), while ExxonMobil has expended US$40Bn to develop seven approved projects, with US$5Bn remaining in the cost bank.
  • Higher oil prices are accelerating cost recovery, meaning ExxonMobil is repaying costs faster, which could result in a significant increase in Guyana’s share of revenues from crude sales, moving beyond the roughly 14.5% currently received into the Natural Resource Fund, and strengthening the country’s fiscal position over time.

(Source: Kaieteur News)