- After announcing a comprehensive ceasefire agreement between the United States and Iran and lifting the naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, U.S. President Donald Trump officially set off for Évian-les-Bains, France, to attend the G7 summit. The dramatic shift in the Middle East situation is expected to dominate the core agenda of this summit.
- The summit will also focus on policy differences in the field of artificial intelligence regulation. European countries are striving to strengthen compliance constraints on tech giants, while the U.S. government opposes strong regulation. Executives from various companies, including OpenAI and Google's parent company, will attend closed-door meetings.
- On global macroeconomic and multilateralism issues, there is a deep contradiction between Trump's "America First" policy and French President Macron's goal of reducing inequality. The traditional alliance between Europe and the U.S. on geopolitical and trade tariffs is under pressure to be reshaped.
U.S.-Iran Ceasefire Agreement Reshapes Geopolitical Agenda
With Pakistan announcing that both the U.S. and Iran have immediately ceased military actions on all fronts, including Lebanon, this significant geopolitical development has quickly reshaped the focus of this G7 summit. U.S. President Trump later confirmed this news via social media and announced the complete authorization for free passage through the Strait of Hormuz, immediately lifting the U.S. naval blockade. Analysts point out that although the technical end of the Middle East conflict significantly eases the pressure on the global energy supply chain, this sudden change will also shift the summit agenda, which was originally focused on multilateral economic cooperation. If the Middle East ceasefire agreement faces uncertainties in execution, the risk premium in the global oil market may need to be reassessed.
AI Regulation Sparks U.S.-Europe Policy Clash
Apart from the Middle East situation, the most suspenseful point of contention at this summit is the governance framework for artificial intelligence (AI). Victor Cha, Director of the Geopolitics and Foreign Policy Department at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), pointed out that there may be substantial friction between the U.S. and Europe on AI regulatory policies. As the rotating presidency, France is actively uniting European allies to impose stricter legal constraints on tech giants from the perspectives of energy consumption, environmental protection, and antitrust. In contrast, the U.S. government consistently adopts a deregulation stance on emerging industries to maintain its technological leadership. French President Macron has invited OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and senior executives from Google and Anthropic to attend, indicating that a direct dialogue on technological sovereignty will unfold between the political and business sectors.
America First Policy Challenges Multilateral Framework
Since taking over the G7 rotating presidency in January, French President Macron has been committed to making reducing inequality and promoting multilateralism core issues. However, this vision fundamentally conflicts with Trump's "America First" policy. According to the World Bank's Gini index, the wealth gap in the U.S. is higher than in all European countries except Turkey, nearing historical highs. On the diplomatic front, the U.S. government frequently imposes tariffs on allies and has repeatedly questioned the effectiveness of NATO, the core of North American defense. European leaders' dissatisfaction with the U.S. unilateral narrative is growing, and this summit is likely to evolve into a candid debate over the dominance of global governance.
Cross-Asset Impact and Transmission Effects Enter Key Window
The easing of geopolitical tensions and the regulatory battle over technology are simultaneously transmitting to global financial markets. With the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, international oil prices are under short-term pressure, and global supply chain inflation expectations may decline accordingly. However, if European regulatory policies on U.S. AI giants exceed expectations, the overseas valuation of the tech sector may face phased adjustment pressure. Market participants need to closely monitor the wording of the summit's final joint communiqué on trade tariffs, cross-border cybersecurity, and antitrust compliance. If major economies cannot bridge their differences on key issues, the volatility of global cross-asset markets may rise significantly.