The rally was real. The resolution wasn't.

The S&P surged 2.9% on Trump's signal of an exit from Iran. Boards exhaled. They shouldn't have.

Here is what the market priced in: resolution.

Here is what actually happened: a withdrawal announcement from a military engagement, with the Strait of Hormuz still closed and no plan to reopen it. Administration officials have been explicit. Forcing the Strait back open extends the mission. So they are not planning to do it.

The distinction matters for every company with energy exposure, manufacturing dependencies, or supply chains that run through global shipping lanes.

The Hormuz reality

Roughly 20% of global oil and 25% of global LNG transits the Strait of Hormuz. When that channel closes, the energy shock is not a temporary spike. It is a structural repricing. Fuel surcharges are already appearing in summer travel bookings. Helium supplies are tightening. Printed circuit board inputs are showing shortages. Agricultural logistics margins are compressing.

A presidential exit from a military theater does not reopen a waterway. That is a physical and operational reality. It is also a constituent issue for every member of Congress whose district includes energy producers, manufacturers, or logistics operators. The political fallout from tonight's address will arrive later, not tonight, once the gap between the signal and the reality becomes undeniable.

Meanwhile, the US is simultaneously administering a $166 billion tariff refund portal, accruing $23 million in interest per day. Q2's fiscal and economic picture is significantly more complicated than today's rally suggests.

The alliance fracture

While markets celebrated, something more durable was happening in transatlantic relations. Spain, Italy, France, and Poland all declined US requests for military access related to the operation in Iran. Per the Financial Times, that fracture is now running through day-to-day working relationships at the staff and intelligence level.

Jennifer Jacobs, a senior White House reporter at CBS News, reports that President Trump's primetime address tonight is likely to be critical of NATO.

This is not an abstract diplomatic dispute. When alliance relationships deteriorate at the operational level, the downstream effects reach trade negotiations, regulatory coordination, and market access decisions. Multinationals with meaningful European exposure are operating in an environment where the institutional scaffolding of the post-WWII order is under active stress.

For boards and C-suites managing both Atlantic trade relationships and US-China exposure, this isn't a background risk. It is a planning variable.

The AI wildcard

Layered atop the energy and alliance story is an information environment actively shaped by state actors. Iran's AI-assisted disinformation campaign is not targeting defense ministries. It is targeting employee news feeds and customer social media timelines. The communications resilience question, once a PR function, has become a board-level governance issue.

At the same time, OpenAI just closed a round valuing the company at $852 billion, with 40% of its $2 billion in monthly revenue now coming from enterprise sales. AI is no longer primarily a consumer product. It is B2B infrastructure at scale, and the corporate adoption curve is steeper than most boardrooms are planning for.

What companies should do now?

Three immediate actions worth taking into your next strategy conversation:

1. Energy costs: Stress-test your Q2 and Q3 energy cost assumptions against a Strait that stays closed through summer. If your models assumed normalization after a US military exit, rebuild them.

2: Diplomatic decline: Audit your European market access and regulatory relationships to identify potential friction points with alliances. The US-European fracture is not diplomatic noise. It is showing up in working relationships.

3. AI propaganda: Establish a baseline on your AI information environment. Who is shaping the narratives reaching your employees and customers, and how would you know if state-sponsored content was already embedded in those channels?

Where Caracal Global can help

Tariff volatility. NATO credibility erosion. Supply chain disruption. Chinese competition. AI and tech sovereignty. Export control tightening. Interest rate uncertainty. These forces are reshaping your capital allocation, supply chain strategy, and competitive positioning right now. Your competitors are responding strategically. Are you responding reactively?

Caracal Global is a fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer firm serving Fortune 1000 companies and PE portfolio companies. Michigan-born, DC-based, operating at the intersection of globalization and American politics. We deliver Intelligence, Strategy, and Communications, backed by experience in US and UK national campaigns, US-China commercial relations, NATO engagement, and global media.

We monitor geopolitical signals daily: tariff announcements, military movements, policy shifts, trade negotiations, export control changes, and competitive positioning. We translate those signals into what they mean for your business. We help your board move from reacting to strategizing.

The exit signal was real. The resolution was not.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc.

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global.

*****

Marc A. Ross is a geopolitical strategist and the founder of Caracal Global, a fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer service for Fortune 1,000 companies and private equity firms. He publishes the Caracal Global Daily — what a Chief Geopolitical Officer monitors every morning. Subscribe at caracal.global/contact.

The Moon and The Don. Pay attention to both.

At 6:24 PM ET, NASA launches Artemis II — the first crewed mission toward the Moon in 53 years. Hours later, the President of the United States delivers a prime-time address about a war that has closed the world's most critical maritime chokepoint, spiked oil 60% in a single month, and fractured the Western alliance in ways that will outlast the conflict itself.

That's not a coincidence. That's the operating environment. And if your geopolitical risk framework hasn't been rebuilt since February, you're managing yesterday's world.

Here are the five things I'm watching — and what they mean for your business.

1. The Iran exit that isn't clean: Trump told aides he expects to be out of Iran in two to three weeks. Markets surged. Here's the problem: leaving doesn't mean reopening the Hormuz Strait. Administration officials have told Bloomberg that reopening the waterway would extend the military mission. Trump wants out. The Strait stays closed. If your capital allocation team is modeling a Q2 energy price normalization, rebuild those assumptions now.

2. Europe is done being polite: Spain. Italy. France. Poland. All are declining to support US military operations, each in their own way. Trump posted "The U.S.A. will REMEMBER." That's not a diplomatic signal — that's a ledger entry. FT reports the strain runs through day-to-day operational cooperation between military personnel, intelligence officials, and diplomats. Companies with relationships with European governments need to update their maps. The 2024 alliance architecture no longer holds.

3. The energy shock is structural: Frankfurt, Delhi, Mumbai, Hong Kong — all high risk for jet fuel shortages in April. Airgas declared force majeure on helium. Nikkei reports shortages emerging in lasers, PCBs, components, and materials. The Iran war and the AI boom are drawing from the same industrial supply pool. Your summer travel budget will absorb fuel surcharges. Your data center timeline will absorb component delays. Your manufacturing floor already feels it.

4. AI capital doesn't wait: OpenAI just closed $122 billion at $852 billion. Microsoft is building a $7 billion power plant in Texas. Nvidia took a $2 billion stake in Marvell. Capital is moving at full speed, through a geopolitical crisis, into infrastructure that will define the next decade. If your technology strategy is still running on a pre-war risk budget, you're ceding ground.

5. The information war is already inside your organization: Iran's cyber and propaganda operations aren't targeting governments — they're targeting your employees' news feeds, your customers' social media timelines, and your stakeholders' version of reality. NYT reports the campaign is AI-assisted, sophisticated, and designed for persistence. Communications resilience is now a board-level issue, not a PR function.

The common thread across all five is that geopolitical volatility is no longer a risk category to monitor. It's an operating condition to manage. You need intelligence. You need a strategy. You need a communications architecture that holds under pressure.

Caracal Global provides fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer services — Intelligence, Strategy, and Communications — for Fortune 1000 companies and PE portfolio companies, without the overhead of a full-time hire. If Iran, Hormuz, and alliance fracture are now on your board's agenda and there isn't a geopolitical officer in the room, that's the conversation we should be having. More at caracal.global.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global.

*****

Marc A. Ross is a geopolitical strategist and the founder of Caracal Global, a fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer service for Fortune 1,000 companies and private equity firms. He publishes the Caracal Global Daily — what a Chief Geopolitical Officer monitors every morning. Subscribe at caracal.global/contact.

The Moon is now geopolitical

Wednesday evening at 6:24 pm ET, four astronauts will climb aboard an Orion capsule atop the world's most powerful rocket and begin a 10-day journey around the Moon and back. It will be the first time humans have traveled to the lunar vicinity since December 1972. The coverage will focus on the spectacle. The countdown clock. The launch pad footage—the human drama of four people heading into deep space.

That's fine. Watch the launch. It's worth watching. But don't let the spectacle crowd out the signal.

Artemis II isn't a science mission. It's a geopolitical statement. And every CEO, board member, and senior executive operating in today's global business environment needs to understand why.

Here's the context: China has a lunar program. It is not hypothetical. Beijing has landed robotic missions on the far side of the Moon. It has announced a crewed landing target of 2030. It has explicitly framed lunar exploration as a strategic priority — not for scientific discovery, but for territorial positioning, access to resources, and the soft power that comes from planting a flag where others haven't reached. The United States response — after years of budget battles, technical delays, and contractor struggles — is launching on Wednesday. The race isn't metaphorical. It's operational.

Now layer in the current environment. The United States is managing an active war in the Middle East, a fiscal standoff that has partially shuttered the Department of Homeland Security, and a diplomatic posture that is straining relationships with traditional allies. Against that backdrop, NASA is sending four people in a capsule into orbit around the Moon. That choice — to proceed, to spend the money, to absorb the risk — is itself a signal. It says American ambition is not exhausted, even when American politics is exhausting.

If you want to go deeper with this analysis, read the book I distributed at last month's Brigadoon gathering in Utah, Tim Marshall's The Future of Geography: How the Competition in Space Will Change Our World. Marshall's thesis is straightforward: whoever controls near-Earth space will shape power dynamics on Earth — full stop. Not metaphorically. Structurally. Satellites underpin financial systems, military command, navigation, and communications. The Moon's south pole sits atop water ice that can be converted to rocket fuel — whoever establishes extractive infrastructure there controls a logistics node for everything that comes after. Marshall documents how China, Russia, and the United States are each approaching space not as a scientific commons but as a domain of sovereignty, commerce, and eventual conflict. 

Three things Artemis II means for your business.

First, the defense and aerospace supply chain is at an inflection point. Artemis II isn't just NASA. Boeing built the core stage. Lockheed Martin built Orion. SpaceX and Blue Origin are building the lunar landers for subsequent missions. A successful Artemis II would validate the entire tech stack and unlock the accelerated mission schedule NASA announced in February, with a landing planned for 2028 and at least one lunar surface mission per year thereafter. The following procurement pipeline is significant. If you're in aerospace, advanced manufacturing, or materials, the contracting activity that flows from a successful Artemis II is worth mapping now.

Second, the competition for lunar resources is moving from academic abstraction to strategic planning. The Moon contains water ice at its south pole, which could be converted into rocket fuel for a mission to Mars. It contains rare earth elements. It contains helium-3, a potential fusion fuel. The Artemis program's southern polar focus isn't accidental. What gets established in the next five years will be the Moon ballgame. From those with infrastructure to those with legal standing under nascent space resource frameworks. These landings on the Moon will shape competitive dynamics across industries, from energy to advanced materials, that most executives haven't yet begun to model.

Third, this is a moment of American capability demonstration in a world that is actively questioning American reliability. In the same week that NATO allies are hedging on US security guarantees and Gulf states are absorbing retaliatory strikes from Iran, NASA is launching a crewed lunar mission. The soft power value of that signals that the long-term American institutional capacity is a go. For companies navigating international relationships, government partnerships, and global brand positioning, the Artemis II geopolitical backdrop matters.

Watch Wednesday's launch. Then think about what it means beyond the countdown clock.

The world is watching to see whether American ambition translates into American execution. Four people in a capsule above the Moon will be part of that answer.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc 

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global.

*****

Marc A. Ross is a geopolitical strategist and the founder of Caracal Global, a fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer service for Fortune 1,000 companies and private equity firms. He publishes the Caracal Global Daily — what a Chief Geopolitical Officer monitors every morning. Subscribe at caracal.global/contact.