Thursday, June 25, 2026

India's Imports Of Russian Oil Set For New Record High









by Tyler Durden
Thursday, Jun 25, 2026 - 06:15 PM


India is set to import a record-high volume of Russian crude in June as the Hormuz crisis and the U.S. waivers on Russia’s barrels have pushed the world’s third-largest crude importer to gorge on Moscow’s oil again, OilPrice reported.

India has imported 2.6 million barrels per day (bpd) of Russian crude oil so far in June, according to preliminary vessel-tracking data from commodity analytics firm Kpler cited by Indian media.

So far this month, Russian crude has accounted for as much as 53.5% of all Indian oil imports, per the data.

Russian crude now makes up HALF of India’s oil imports in June! India is importing 2.66 million barrels per day of Russian oil — which is nearly 40% higher than May. This has strengthened Russia’s position as India’s largest oil supplier. Key Points: • Russian oil share has Show more
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India’s full-month imports of Russian crude are set for a record-high of 2.35 million bpd in June for any month ever, Kpler has estimated. This would exceed the previous record of 2.2 million bpd from May 2023.

Going forward, Russian crude will remain a key source of supply for India even if the U.S. does not extend the waiver for Russian crude already loaded on tankers, analysts say. Which is odd because when viewed from the other side, the picture is a mirror image: as shown in the chart below, Russian crude oil exports to India have reportedly plunged to just 555kb/d in the last week, the lowest volume in 4 years.



In other words, there is a disconnect in the data.

In any case, last week, as it announced the memorandum of understanding with Iran, the U.S. quietly let the waiver on Russian oil sales expire without renewing it.

“India’s imports remained strong through June, supported by continued discounts and steady refinery demand,” Sumit Ritolia, manager, modelling and refining at Kpler, told Financial Express.

“Regardless of whether the US waiver is extended, we expect India’s imports of Russian crude to remain robust, even if not at record-high levels.”

India turned en masse to Russian oil in 2022, when the U.S. and the EU imposed sanctions on Moscow due to the invasion of Ukraine. Four years later, India is a major buyer of Russia’s crude, and Russia is India’s single-largest oil supplier.

As supply from the Middle East crashes, India is also buying growing volumes of crude from West African producers Nigeria and Angola, as well as from South American producers Brazil and Venezuela.


European Rearmament Efforts Snuffed By Chinese Control Of Critical Materials









by Tyler Durden
Thursday, Jun 25, 2026 - 07:45 PM


Yesterday we reported that, in a tit-for-tat move, China announced it is targeting US rare earths firms in response to a Pentagon list of Chinese firms: this, as Rabobank noted, is largely a symbolic move, but it still underlines the tensions in this area. So does the Nikkei reporting that ‘China minerals control threatens EU rearmament, as bloc seeks new sources’: because, as Rabo's Michael Every notes, even if you can afford a dagger, you can’t make it without rare earths, and Europe still hasn’t secured enough supply.

Taking a closer look at the report, Nikkei writes that the European Union's aggressive plans to boost defense capabilities are hampered by China's export controls and sales restrictions on critical raw materials, with the bloc's leaders now calling on countries to accelerate the diversification of their supply chains.

The European Commission last week said that it will propose a new law that will require companies in the bloc to expand their suppliers to address economic imbalances, although it did not name China.

Russia's war in Ukraine and growing uncertainty over Washington's security guarantees have pushed governments in Europe to increase military spending and production. But for 17 of the 34 materials classified as critical by the EU, China accounts for at least 70% of global mining or refining, a report published by Teer in May shows. Eight of those 34 materials are subject to Chinese export controls.

"China is in the process of pulling the rug out from under Europe's rearmament efforts," said Joris Teer, a policy analyst at the EU Institute for Security Studies (EUISS), the bloc's agency for foreign, security and defense policy analysis.

"By just deploying this weapon, China has already increased its leverage, signaling both its capacity and willingness to squeeze supply at any moment of its choosing," Teer wrote.

Escalating geopolitical developments and intensifying global competition for critical raw materials underline the growing need to strengthen Europe's supply chains, said the Aerospace, Security and Defence Industries Association of Europe. The organization represents over 4,000 companies including the U.K.'s BAE Systems, France's Thales and Germany's Rheinmetall.

European defense manufacturers are pursuing several strategies including vertical integration, recycling, diversification and stockpiling. Rheinmetall told Nikkei Asia it had "no dependencies" and was "well prepared with regard to critical minerals."

"Rheinmetall has stored key raw materials, enough to last for several years," a spokesperson said. "We have implemented IT systems that enable us to centrally monitor and control raw material consumption across the group with precision."


But analysts warn that stockpiling alone will not be enough.

"Stockpiling is an important buffer against immediate disruptions, but on its own it is unlikely to reduce structural damage over the long term," said Maria Shagina, senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. She said it would take years for alternative sources to replace either the volumes or the range of critical minerals that Beijing controls.

In 2024, the EU introduced the European Critical Raw Materials Act, aimed at rebuilding domestic supply chains for such minerals. It sets 2030 targets for domestic extraction, processing and recycling, while capping reliance on any single third-country supplier at 65%. A 3 billion-euro ($3.5 billion) fund was launched last year to accelerate strategic projects.

But the European Court of Auditors notes that the 2030 targets are nonbinding and that the bloc remains far from achieving them. Industry groups say policy inconsistencies could slow progress further.

The Cobalt Institute, representing an industry vital to jet engines, advanced batteries and defense alloys, said proposed EU rules involving chemicals risk hollowing out the sector.

"Europe is one foot in, one foot out," said Michael Blakeney, head of government and public affairs at the London-based institute. "It is saying all the right things, but what it is doing is incoherent."

Europe's efforts coincide with an aggressive approach by the U.S. to secure critical mineral supply chains.

"The U.S. is deploying more capital, taking larger financial risks and in some cases acquiring equity stakes to secure and build capacity," Shagina said. "By contrast, Europe has generally been more cautious ... leaving [it] at a relative disadvantage in competing for critical minerals."

In April, the EU signed an agreement with the U.S. to coordinate critical mineral supplies. Following initial resistance over fears it could dilute the bloc's strategic autonomy, member states authorized the commission earlier in June to sign up to the U.S.-led Pax Silica initiative, which coordinates investment and export-control policies.

Teer urged the European bloc to use ongoing U.S.-EU-Japan negotiations as the "nucleus" of a wider coalition to make non-Chinese critical mineral production financially viable, backed by state support, price floors and procurement rules.

"Particularly important are raw material producers, or deposit holders, like Malaysia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Brazil and Indonesia, as well as countries with vast skilled-workforce potential like India," he wrote in the paper.

To deter further Chinese restrictions, he said the EU also should activate its anti-coercion instrument, which allows it to impose tariffs and restrictions as a response to economic coercion by countries outside of the bloc.

A European Commission spokesperson said the bloc had "long recognized the risks linked to the EU's dependencies on critical raw materials."

"The objective is clear: Anticipate disruptions early and reduce the EU's vulnerabilities as we scale up our industrial and defense capacities," the spokesperson said.

Bersama goes literal, joins the chorus, refuses to write its own song






Bersama goes literal, joins the chorus, refuses to write its own song



Thursday, 25 Jun 2026 8:48 AM MYT
By Praba Ganesan


JUNE 25 — It is three days to the start of the Johor election.

There is absolutely nothing of significance to report as far as ideas are concerned.

Based on Johor, and presumably in Negeri Sembilan too, Malaysia should look around to see if there are global awards or ranking systems for political parties, like TIMES or QS.

Because we would absolutely smash it as the most colourless electioneers in the world.

Really, just nothing out there.

And my ire is directed at Bersama. Surely as the late johnny to the soirée, it should make more of a meal of it.

Why?

Because it is the Rafizi Ramli party. Opines he rides ahead of the herd. Now, unconstrained by party etiquette and fluff, he can display his full repertoire. Instead, he and Bersama, other than the wisecracks, are completely rudderless.

Firstly, that does not mean do not vote for Bersama. There are worse choices. It’s just that after pegging itself as the better choice, it refuses to be the different choice it promises to be. And if there is no substantive difference between Bersama and the tired usual, incumbency wins.

That’s the pity of it all.

Rafizi Ramli and Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad left their party and their parliamentary seats. Noble in that they did not pretend to stay in the party while bitching about it and the leadership.

And they started a party. Which is great for them. All Jomo Kenyattas and Sukarnos have to begin with vehicles.

Now, there’s the vehicle. Use it.

Tell us why Bersama has the core principles which were never realised in PKR.

It seems they have the same idea of political parties as those in the ascendancy. Pick up interesting people and put them in to contest.

Since interesting people are in short supply they settle for “been around” characters, hoping they’d be familiar even if galaxies away from being interesting.

How not to be incensed when Bersama chooses to unveil its 15 candidates tomorrow evening, 12 hours from the nomination deadline.

Rafizi says it is a strategy. At this rate they might be the best kept secrets in all the 15 constituencies the weekend after election day. If the strategy was for fewer people to know that they want their votes, then it is working spectacularly well.



How not to be incensed when Bersama chooses to unveil its 15 candidates tomorrow evening, 12 hours from the nomination deadline. — Picture by Raymond Manuel


The reason why election campaigns were shortened in the 1980s by Dr Mahathir was to rush them, and therefore not let his opponents familiarise themselves to voters.

Mix it with the potent power of incumbency and state media, it results in electorates in a struggle to turn their backs on Barisan Nasional.

Before the voters can pause to consider the other ideas available and chat with their friends and families, and rationalise the options and candidates, the politicians are already in the state assembly or Dewan Rakyat to be sworn-in.

New ideas need time to coagulate in the minds of the people. New parties by definition seek to bring new ideas. Getting more time is critical for them to seed the ideas in the masses’ minds.

That means putting their core principles out early. Introduce the candidates as early as possible and hit the ground running. Only when the people are acquainted with the candidates can they offer themselves as volunteers and polling/counting agents.

BN, PN and Pakatan do not need more time to campaign beyond what is allotted because they do not intend to present anything new. They are resource rich and imagination poor which is par for the course.

Let me give you an example.

BN are very happy that Zahid Hamidi, who is also their chairman, is not made to complete his defence in the Akal Budi case, those 47 corruption charges.

PN are the people inside the glass house who cannot ill-afford to throw stones.

Pakatan is led by the prime minister.

All three are going to instead claim they are about doing the best for Malaysia beginning with Johor.

Why so, they have a good line-up of candidates. They have zero interest in assuming a clear position because that would be risky.

How does Bersama want to deal with the Zahid question?

By not.

It is highly unlikely that Rafizi can find it in himself to say that it was wrong not to pursue the case.

To be contrite about the past. Bersama cannot surge in the present without the fortitude to admit its leaders’ complicity in political compromises, shockingly unethical.

The high moral horse needs an occupant and no one is brave enough to mount the saddle.

Zahid is not the only mistake that Rafizi actively participated in, so did Nik Nazmi. The journey to the top through Bersama requires them to cleanse themselves of their previous roles, by being remorseful, at least.

Then to live that kamikaze ethos they announce but do not dare embrace in action.

They are not in PKR anymore, so why act like they are? They can break the usual splinter mould. Rather than be a better version of PKR, they can become a better version of themselves and offer examples to their people to a philosophical core of their movement. Again, not a less dull version of PKR.

For instance, the campaign for the 16th General Election should have started two years ago. They are late but instead of trying to be a contender in this election, they should treat it as a dress rehearsal for the real show, the general election no more than eighteen months from now.

I fear in desperation they’d just join the rest, to be the umpteenth populist party with no ideas but a conveyor belt of recycled leaders.

I’d be happy to be proven wrong but all the indications up to this juncture point to a brasher appearing party with an unabashed leader with no logical theory underpinning the enterprise.

Before they want the people to sing their song, they might want to write it. Not mimic the old guys and hope everyone pretends it’s a new song because Rafizi and Nik Nazmi are singing it.


Elon Musk says Singapore’s founding PM Lee Kuan Yew was a ‘genius’ — because of air conditioning





Elon Musk says Singapore’s founding PM Lee Kuan Yew was a ‘genius’ — because of air conditioning



Musk’s latest tribute to Lee Kuan Yew centres on an unlikely invention: air conditioning. — Reuters file pic

Thursday, 25 Jun 2026 5:22 PM MYT


SINGAPORE, June 25 — Tech billionaire Elon Musk has hailed Singapore’s founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew as a “genius”, this time for his long-held belief that air conditioning was one of the most important inventions in modern history.

Musk made the remark on X yesterday, replying to a post by content creator Trung Phan that highlighted one of Lee’s best-known observations about how air conditioning transformed Singapore’s development.

“Lee Kuan Yew was a genius,” Musk wrote.

The post resurfaced an excerpt from a 2009 interview Lee gave to New Perspectives Quarterly, in which he argued that air conditioning fundamentally changed what countries in the tropics could achieve.

“Air conditioning was a most important invention for us, perhaps one of the signal inventions of history,” Lee said.

“It changed the nature of civilisation by making development possible in the tropics.”

Lee explained that before widespread air conditioning, people in hot, humid climates could work efficiently only during the cooler hours of the day.

One of his earliest decisions after becoming prime minister, he said, was to install air conditioners in government offices to improve the productivity of the civil service.

“The first thing I did upon becoming prime minister was to install air conditioners in buildings where the civil service worked. This was key to public efficiency,” he said.

The renewed attention on Lee’s remarks comes as Europe grapples with another severe heatwave, where soaring temperatures have renewed debate over how countries adapt workplaces, infrastructure and cities to increasingly extreme weather.

The quote has frequently been cited as an example of Lee’s pragmatic approach to nation-building, emphasising how seemingly ordinary infrastructure could have an outsized impact on economic growth and governance.

It is not the first time Musk has publicly expressed admiration for Singapore’s founding leader.

In July 2024, the Tesla and SpaceX chief shared a post praising Lee’s long-term vision in developing Singapore, particularly his role in building Changi Airport into one of the world’s leading aviation hubs, describing him then as “brilliant”.


Malaysia acquires French CAESAR artillery systems, eyes homegrown weapons for ANKA-S fleet, says Khaled





Malaysia acquires French CAESAR artillery systems, eyes homegrown weapons for ANKA-S fleet, says Khaled



Defence Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin said details on the delivery timeline would be announced later and stressed that the procurement process would be carried out transparently. — Picture by Firdaus Latif.

Thursday, 25 Jun 2026 1:16 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, June 25 — Malaysia has formally procured CAESAR 155mm self-propelled howitzers (SPH) from France, Defence Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin confirmed today.

“I can confirm that we have agreed on that procurement. That will be another asset added to our arsenal,” he told reporters after launching the National Defence Strategic Plan (PSPN) and the National Defence Capacity Action Plan at Royale Chulan Kuala Lumpur today.

However, Khaled said details on the delivery timeline would be announced later and stressed that the procurement process would be carried out transparently.


“We have nothing to hide,” he added.

The Finance Ministry had reportedly given the green light for the procurement in 2024, but the Defence Ministry was asked to renegotiate the price of the artillery system before finalising the deal.

The Defence Ministry also reportedly allocated RM50 million for the first phase of the acquisition in November 2025 and said the process would be finalised this year.


Separately, Khaled defended Malaysia’s decision to acquire three ANKA-S unmanned aircraft systems from Turkey without offensive weaponry, citing operational requirements and cost-effectiveness.

“The purpose of ANKA-S is for surveillance and to gather intelligence.

“So, if it detects the presence of suspicious assets in our territories, we can deploy our other existing assets to neutralise the threats.

“The weapons for ANKA-S cost almost RM300 million. So, we will fit it with weapons only if we want to deploy it for offensive missions,” he said.

Khaled said Malaysia plans to acquire nine ANKA-S units in phases, with the first batch of three already deployed at the Labuan Air Base.

He said the agreement with Turkey also includes a technology transfer component that would enable Malaysia to develop its own weapon systems for the unmanned aircraft.

“So, when we develop our own weapons, then we will fit them into it (ANKA-S),” he added.

Anwar remains Malaysia’s most popular leader, with Khairy close behind as economy tops voter concerns, Merdeka Center survey finds





Anwar remains Malaysia’s most popular leader, with Khairy close behind as economy tops voter concerns, Merdeka Center survey finds



Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim remains the highest-rated political leader in Malaysia with a 52 per cent approval rating, according to a Merdeka Center survey released on June 25. — Bernama pic

Thursday, 25 Jun 2026 5:35 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, June 25 — Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim continues to command the highest approval rating among Malaysia’s key political figures at 52 per cent, according to a Merdeka Center survey released today.

He is closely followed by returning Umno leader Khairy Jamaluddin at 50 per cent.

Among opposition figures, former prime minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin registered 36 per cent approval.

He is followed by newly appointed Perikatan Nasional chairman Datuk Seri Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar at 28 per cent, PAS president Tan Sri Abdul Hadi Awang at 25 per cent, and Umno president and Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi at 24 per cent.

Former economy minister Datuk Seri Rafizi Ramli, who has since left PKR to form Bersama, recorded 32 per cent.

The survey shows a steady 42 per cent of voters believe the country is moving in the right direction — unchanged from December 2025 and February 2026 — but still higher than mid-2025 levels when fewer than four in 10 shared the same view.

Half of respondents, 50 per cent, say Malaysia is heading in the wrong direction.


Economic concerns continue to dominate public sentiment.

More than half of respondents (53 per cent) cited issues such as the broader economy, cost of living and fuel prices as their main concern about the country’s direction.

When asked to name the single biggest issue facing Malaysians, 73 per cent pointed to economic matters, cutting across all ethnic groups.

On government performance, 51 per cent expressed dissatisfaction with the handling of the economy compared to 46 per cent who were satisfied.

However, the level of dissatisfaction has eased compared to trends seen throughout 2025.

Overall, federal government approval stands at 50 per cent satisfied versus 48 per cent dissatisfied.

Regionally, Bumiputera respondents in Sabah and Sarawak recorded the highest satisfaction at 68 per cent, followed by Chinese respondents at 53 per cent, while Indian and Malay respondents reported 46 per cent and 44 per cent respectively.

The most approving age group was 21 to 30-year-olds at 64 per cent.

The survey was conducted between March 12 and April 9. 2026, involving 1,209 registered voters, sampled to reflect Malaysia’s national electoral profile.



***


T'was only yesterday I tread (somewhere) that KJ topped the leadership polls


Iran war day 118: IRGC rejects new Hormuz route



Iran war day 118: IRGC rejects new Hormuz route; Rubio to meet GCC leaders

Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard warns against alternative route in the Strait of Hormuz as top US diplomat to meet Gulf officials.

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Marco Rubio
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaks to the media on June 24, 2026, before boarding a US Air Force plane in Kuwait to fly to Bahrain to discuss the interim deal between the US and Iran with Arab Gulf countries [Eric Lee/Pool via Reuters]

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has arrived for a meeting of the Gulf Cooperation Council in Bahrain, where he is expected to reassure regional allies that Washington will protect their security and economic interests as it seeks to reach a peace deal with Iran.

At the same time, differences remain over the future of Iran’s nuclear programme. The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency said its inspectors will return to Iran’s nuclear sites, but Tehran insisted inspections will resume only once a final agreement with the United States has been reached.

Meanwhile, tensions continue in Lebanon despite ongoing diplomacy and a ceasefire. Two people were killed in an Israeli strike on the southern city of Nabatieh while Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said Israeli forces would remain in southern Lebanon even if the US called for a withdrawal.

Here is what we know:

In Iran

  • Iran warns ships against new Hormuz route: The navy of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned vessels not to use what it called an “unapproved” shipping lane through the Strait of Hormuz, saying the route was created without Tehran’s consent and ships must use Iranian-designated corridors or risk enforcement action. Oman earlier had released guidelines for transiting the strait in coordination with the International Maritime Organization of the United Nations.
  • Iran accuses NATO of complicity in war: Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs accused NATO of being complicit in what it called an “unlawful war of aggression” after NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said European allies supported the US and Israeli strikes. Tehran said NATO members involved, including Italy and Romania, must be held accountable for their role.
  • More South Korean ships transit Hormuz: Five additional South Korean-operated vessels have safely sailed through the Strait of Hormuz, signalling a further easing of shipping restrictions. South Korea said 13 of its ships remain in the strategic waterway.

In the Gulf:

  • Rubio reassures Gulf allies over Iran deal: US Secretary of State Marco Rubio is continuing a Gulf tour. He visited the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait on Wednesday before travelling to Bahrain, where he is due to meet Gulf Cooperation Council leaders in Manama on Thursday. He said the US would ensure any agreement with Iran reflects the security and economic concerns of its regional allies and pledged not to undermine their interests during the negotiations.

In the US

  • ICC judges sue Trump administration over sanctions: Three International Criminal Court judges filed a lawsuit against US President Donald Trump’s administration, arguing that US sanctions imposed on them are unlawful and seek to punish them for past judicial decisions, including rulings involving Israel and alleged US war crimes in Afghanistan. They said the sanctions have severely restricted their ability to work, travel and access financial services.

In Lebanon

  • Israeli strike kills two in southern Lebanon: Two people were killed in an Israeli strike near Nabatieh on Wednesday while residents of the southern village of Ain al-Arab were ordered to leave or face the demolition of their homes. The incidents come as Lebanese and Israeli officials hold talks in Washington, DC, and discuss pilot zones that are intended to pave the way for an Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon and the deployment of the Lebanese army.