Shockwaves in Munich: Vance torches transatlantic ties, Germany left gobsmacked
The annual Munich Security Conference was supposed to focus on Ukraine, NATO, and European security. Instead, it became a political battlefield, with U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance igniting a diplomatic firestorm. His speech—a scathing indictment of Europe’s political and cultural trajectory—left German officials stunned and scrambling for a response.
Vance didn’t just criticize Europe—he declared it a greater threat to democracy than Russia or China. He attacked Europe’s handling of free speech, mass immigration, and what he called "Soviet-era propaganda" on misinformation. The moment he dropped those words, Germany’s Defense Minister Boris Pistorius visibly bristled, muttering, “This is unacceptable.” Minutes later, he stormed out of the room to rewrite his own speech in response.
But Vance’s rhetoric was just the opening salvo. Hours later, the real bombshell dropped—news that Trump had called Putin directly to discuss “immediate” peace negotiations for Ukraine—without informing European leaders or Kyiv. To add insult to injury, U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had already signaled that Washington was ready to abandon Ukraine’s NATO ambitions and territorial integrity before negotiations even began.
For Germany, the conference’s host, the fallout was seismic. Vance’s speech landed in the middle of a heated election cycle, where the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) is making record gains. Mainstream German leaders were furious.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz fired back, warning, “Germany will not accept outsiders interfering in our democracy.” Christian Democrat leader Friedrich Merz accused Trump’s team of “openly interfering” in the German election.
Vance doubled down. He called for an end to the political “firewalls” that isolate the AfD and, in an unprecedented move, met with AfD co-leader Alice Weidel—after conference organizers barred her from attending. Meanwhile, he snubbed Scholz entirely, refusing to meet with him.
The AfD, long shunned across Europe, is suddenly in the international spotlight. Just days before, Weidel was hosted in Budapest by Hungarian PM Viktor Orbán, who declared her “the future of Europe.” Elon Musk, a close Trump ally, has also thrown his weight behind the AfD, after personally courting Weidel for over a year.
A diplomatic earthquake
Germany is reeling. For eight decades, its security, economic success, and democratic rebirth were anchored in transatlantic ties. Now, Trump’s administration is shattering that foundation.
Munich has seen U.S.-Germany tensions before—from clashes over Iraq to Merkel’s standoff with Trump. But this time feels different. It’s not about policy—it’s about a fundamental shift in the U.S. stance toward Europe.
The conference ended with two opposing reactions:
- Some leaders argued Europe must now act fast to secure its own defense, decoupling from U.S. reliance.
- Others dismissed Vance’s performance as a deliberate provocation—not a true policy shift.
But one thing is clear:
Germany just got a brutal wake-up call “ Trump Administration Style”
Cracking the European "war premium" myth: Markets don’t lie
The so-called European "War Premium" is unwinding, and while markets are celebrating, the real question remains: how much of Europe’s stock market discount was actually war-related? The answer might be far less than expected.
If the war in Ukraine had truly imposed a crippling economic overhang on Europe, you’d expect industries most vulnerable to energy shocks—like large-cap industrials—to have taken a serious hit. Yet, when you stack up U.S. and European industrial stocks since the invasion, something counterintuitive emerges:
Their performance is virtually identical.
In fact, European industrials have seen their relative valuations decline—meaning they’ve only kept pace because their earnings have grown faster. This isn't what you’d expect from a war-ravaged economy supposedly drowning in geopolitical uncertainty.
So, what’s really behind Europe’s valuation discount?
- The U.S. tech juggernaut – The defining feature of markets since 2022 hasn’t been war-driven capital flight from Europe but rather the relentless surge in U.S. tech megacaps. The AI-fueled rally has widened the valuation gap between American and European markets—not some nebulous "war premium."
- Structural weakness, not just war – Europe’s discount to the U.S. market was 27% at the moment of the invasion and has now widened to 37%. But Japan, which had zero exposure to the war, has seen the exact same discount expansion. Clearly, this isn’t just about Ukraine.
Ukraine-Russia peace talks: The market's next mirage or a real shift?
With peace suddenly on the table, some investors are racing to pile into European assets, banking on a massive revaluation. But here’s the hard truth: peace alone won’t cut it.
What matters isn’t just a ceasefire—it’s a credible, lasting truce that doesn’t collapse under political pressure.
Shifting odds: The Trump-Xi factor
Last week, I pegged Ukraine-Russia peace talks at just 25% probability in 2025. But now? The math is shifting.
- Trump pulling Xi into the mix adds a layer of strategic weight.
- Floating nuclear de-escalation and a potential 50% unilateral defense spending cut across the U.S., China, and Russia? That’s a geopolitical wildcard.
- If Trump can sell this as a “grand bargain”, the odds of a U.S.-led peace deal actually happening this year rise to 50%. It’s still a coin toss in my probability matrix, but those are moving goal post.
What’s the real trade?
Not Europe’s equities. If a deal is rushed, it’s probably been done on the cheap—meaning it’s a highly fragile peace. Any relief rally could fade fast.
The real trigger is TTF gas prices. If a sustainable peace emerges, Europe gets an energy tailwind that could finally unlock growth potential.
But if this is just another diplomatic mirage, don’t expect European valuations to do much beyond a short-lived risk-on bounce.
Bottom line:
- Peace doesn’t equal prosperity. The real tell isn’t in stock indices—it’s in the gas flows.
- Trump’s Ukraine Deal: A high-stakes power play or a strategic bait-and-switch?
This is classic Trump dealmaking—bold, transactional, and unapologetically strategic. When Trump’s envoy, Bessent, touched down in Kyiv, he wasn’t just bringing diplomatic pleasantries—he brought a piece of paper Trump wanted Zelenskyy to sign on the spot.
Labeled as an "economic agreement," the document promised deeper U.S.-Ukraine economic ties. But the fine print? No ironclad security guarantees. No NATO-style defense pact. Instead, the pitch was pure Trumpian calculus: money talks, and American presence alone would keep Moscow at bay.
The offer on the table
- More U.S. investment.
- More American boots on the ground—stationed at Ukraine’s mineral-rich sites.
- No explicit long-term defense commitments.
When pressed on how exactly this would provide lasting security, Ukrainian officials were met with vague assurances. One insider summed it up in a single line:
"It’s a Trump deal."
A geopolitical gambit
This raises a far bigger question—is Trump redefining Ukraine’s role from a military ally to a geo-economic chess piece?
- Biden’s approach: Military aid, NATO-style backing, direct defensive support.
- Trump’s approach: Economic integration, strategic investment, implicit deterrence through U.S. corporate and military presence.
For Ukraine, this is a double-edged sword.
- On one hand, deeper U.S. economic ties could bring long-term stability as Kyiv rebuilds.
- On the other, the lack of clear defense guarantees could leave Ukraine in security limbo, with its natural resources serving as collateral for U.S. involvement rather than full-scale military protection.
The bottom line?
Trump isn’t offering a security pact—he’s offering a business deal. And if Ukraine was hoping for an ironclad U.S. defense commitment, this proposal falls dangerously short.
SPI Asset Management provides forex, commodities, and global indices analysis, in a timely and accurate fashion on major economic trends, technical analysis, and worldwide events that impact different asset classes and investors.
Our publications are for general information purposes only. It is not investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell securities.
Opinions are the authors — not necessarily SPI Asset Management its officers or directors. Leveraged trading is high risk and not suitable for all. Losses can exceed investments.
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