Good morning, folks. We’re wrapping up our week with a look at Egypt’s trucking sector. As the country braces for an economic boom and exports surge, truck sales are booming. But this surge puts pressure on the industry to fix a long-standing problem. Industry insiders tell us all about it in our top story today.
ALSO- Egypt is negotiating to drop the required Israeli component in the Qualifying Industrial Zones (QIZ) from 10.5% to as low as 5%. This could help the country unlock the QIZ’s untapped potential.
Watch this space
RAIL — Turkey seals preliminary backing for Bosphorus rail: Turkey is advancing its Bosphorus rail crossing plan with preliminary agreements with six international lenders for USD 6.8 bn for the Northern Ring Railway Project. The funding framework involves multilateral lenders, including the World Bank, AIIB, ADB, IsDB, EBRD, and the Opec Fund, with Ankara targeting tender completion and site handover this year, clearing the way for construction to start.
The specs: The 125 km line will feature 44 tunnels and 42 bridges and will boost annual freight capacity to 30 mn tons when fully developed.
Why it matters: The project could transform rail freight across the Bosphorus. Currently, rail freight across the Bosphorus Strait is largely dependent on the Marmaray tunnel, with limited daily windows, and the tunnel has moved just 1.7 mn tons in total between 2020 and October 2025.
This sits within Turkey’sbroader push for Iraq’s multimodal Development Road Project, through which Ankara is eyeing a bigger role for the Asia-Europe land-based trade flows. The project outlined a USD 17.9 bn in rail links and USD 2 bn for highways tied to the corridor, which could handle 7.5 mn TEUs a year.
TRADE — India and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) formally kickstarted freetrade agreement talks, building on the terms of reference agreed earlier this month, according to a press release. A framework was greenlit covering goods, services, customs procedures, digital trade, advanced technologies, and investment flows.
Why it matters: The GCC is India’s largest trading partner bloc — with bilateral trade of USD 178.6 bn in FY 2025, growing at a 15.3% annual rate over five years — accounting for over 15% of India’s total global trade. The GCC also accounts for more than USD 31 bn in cumulative FDI into India.
SHIPPING — Saudi oil tanker demand on the rise: Saudi Arabia’s National Shipping Company (Bahri) — the country’s biggest oil shipper — provisionally chartered at least five supertankers, piling into the spot market as rates rip higher, Bloomberg reports, citing brokers with knowledge of the matter. The ships, tracked by Tankers International and confirmed by brokers, are headed for Asia with Saudi barrels.
It’s a tell: Owners usually only dip into the spot market when their fleets can’t keep up with their own cargoes. The oil market closely watches Bahri’s activities for clues about Saudi flows. The Kingdom has recently sold condensate from the Jafurah gas project — part of the LFDP — which would liberate domestic crude previously burned for power.
Rates are doing the talking: Middle East-to-China runs flirted with USD 200k per day this week, the first time since 2020. VLCC earnings are also at their highest in years as geopolitical risk adds a premium, with traders bracing for any disruption tied to US-Iran tensions and oil flows via Hormuz.
What’s next? Saudi plans to ship some 8 mn barrels of crude to China next month, after reducing prices to five-year lows — and the freight market is already front-running it.
Market watch
Oil prices continued their surge as market concerns over a US-Iran military conflict outweighed a buildup in US crude stockpiles, Reuters reports. Brent crude futures gained USD 0.19 to trade at USD 71.04 / bbl as of 04:15 GMT, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) increased USD 0.15 to USD 65.57 / bbl.
The Baltic Index eases back: The Baltic Exchange’s dry bulk sea freight index — which tracks rates for the capesize, panamax, and supramax vessel segments — fell 0.4% to 2,121 points on Wednesday. The capesize slid 2.5% to 3,128 points, while the panamax index rose 1.3% to 1,890. Meanwhile, the smaller supramax index climbed 3.1% to 1,255.
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