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Volcano at the top of the world: Putin and Trump deal under the midnight sun

Anchorage, Alaska isn’t just warm under its endless summer sun — it’s about to be the geopolitical equivalent of a pressure cooker set on the edge of a restless volcano. On one side, Vladimir Putin, the seasoned chess master who’s been playing the same game since before most of today’s ministers had security clearance. On the other hand, Donald Trump, the self-styled dealmaker-in-chief, swaggered into the Elmendorf-Richardson military base like he’s about to close on the most significant piece of political real estate in history.

The stakes? Nothing less than the fate of Ukraine, Europe’s security architecture, and the credibility of U.S. diplomacy. The street’s take: this is no polite fireside chat — it’s a knife fight under the midnight sun, only with nuclear overtones and cameras rolling.

Putin has already begun his pre-summit seduction, calling Trump’s efforts “energetic and sincere” — diplomatic sugar meant to stroke the ego and soften the defences. But behind that velvet compliment is a steel demand: a deal that rewrites the map, rolls back NATO’s reach, and clips Ukraine’s independence to the bone. To Moscow, the “root causes” of the war aren’t shell craters — they’re the prospect of NATO bases.

Trump, ever the poker player, has been telegraphing two hands at once. Publicly, he’s selling this as a test of chemistry — “I’ll know in the first few minutes” — a line that sounds like dating advice but in geopolitical markets reads as a bid-ask check. If the vibes are bad, he says, it’ll be a short meeting. But if the sparks fly, he’s dangling the possibility of a “more important” sit-down with Zelenskyy, maybe even bringing European leaders along for the ride. In other words, round one could just be the weigh-in.

Kyiv, meanwhile, is working the phones like a short-seller trying to stem a squeeze, calling in every political favor it has to prevent being carved up like a distressed asset sold to the highest bidder. European capitals are in on the hustle too, pitching Trump on security guarantees that sound supportive but avoid the one four-letter acronym — NATO — that turns Moscow’s blood cold.

Back in Moscow, Putin’s bringing his A-team: Lavrov for the diplomatic icework, Siluanov to talk sanctions evasion like it’s an emerging markets investment pitch, and Kirill Dmitriev — the Kremlin’s salesman-in-chief — who still believes the Arctic could be the next joint venture gold rush if the politics thaw. The message is clear: peace on our terms, plus a commercial kicker, and we can make history together.

For traders, this summit isn’t about hugging it out — it’s about the spread between talk and action. The risk premium on geopolitical détente is still fat, because every time someone says “long-term peace,” the fine print usually reads “until the next crisis.” Markets don’t do sentiment analysis on handshakes; they wait for the ink to dry and the troops to move.

If this were an FX chart, it would be a narrowing wedge pattern with a breakout coming — but no one’s betting the house on which way. Friday could be a false break, a photo-op that leaves the battlefield unchanged. Or it could be the kind of shock headline that blows stops from Kyiv to Brussels to Wall Street. Either way, the ground under this summit is scorching, and both men are wearing gasoline-soaked boots

Author

Stephen Innes

Stephen Innes

SPI Asset Management

With more than 25 years of experience, Stephen has a deep-seated knowledge of G10 and Asian currency markets as well as precious metal and oil markets.

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