Pricing Power — Who Wins When Everything Gets More Expensive cover art

Pricing Power — Who Wins When Everything Gets More Expensive

Pricing Power — Who Wins When Everything Gets More Expensive

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Guilded News EP6 Episode

Notes: EP5 asked: in a bottlenecked world, who can raise prices without losing demand? Today, three systems answered simultaneously. Segment 1 — The Qatar Pivot: QatarEnergy halted all LNG production at Ras Laffan Industrial City — the world's largest LNG terminal, 77 million tonnes per year — after Iranian drone strikes on March 2. European natural gas prices surged 50%. Asian LNG spot prices climbed 39%. The headline is Brent crude. The real story is the structural concentration of European energy infrastructure in a new chokepoint — and the discovery that "diversification" away from Russian gas built a new dependency, not independence. Segment 2 — The Tariff Trap: The Supreme Court struck down IEEPA tariffs on February 20 (Learning Resources Inc. v. Trump, 6-3). Trump responded immediately with a Section 122 replacement — 10–15%, expiring in 150 days. Penn Wharton: $175 billion in potential refund exposure. Federal Reserve research: 90% of tariff costs were borne by U.S. firms and consumers. The ruling restructured uncertainty without resolving it. In a market that doesn't know its own rules in 150 days, pricing power belongs to whoever can absorb the volatility — and that's not small businesses. Segment 3 — The Compounding Budget: Trump's proposed $1.5 trillion defense budget for FY2027 would be the largest single-year increase since World War II mobilization. But the structural question isn't the politics — it's industrial absorption capacity. When spending outpaces the pace of physical manufacturing, the money buys inflation, not capability. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimates it adds $5.8 trillion to the national debt through 2035. Public reporting. Academic analysis. Economic frameworks. No conspiracy — just the structural mechanics of who wins and who pays. Sources: Argus Media, Al Jazeera, Foreign Policy, Reuters, Brookings Institution, Peterson Institute, Penn Wharton Budget Model, PwC, Debevoise & Plimpton, NYT, CSIS, Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Tax Foundation

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