Europe’s markets and politics jolted into motion as a dramatic US intervention in Venezuela rippled across global finance and diplomacy.
London stocks pushed toward historic highs amid a rush into defence and gold, while regulators intensified scrutiny of AI abuses and leaders from Copenhagen to Budapest warned of far-reaching consequences.
From energy prices to Arctic security, the continent is grappling with a fast-shifting geopolitical landscape that shows little sign of cooling.
FTSE 100 bears 10,000 as Venezuela crisis lifts defence stock
London’s blue-chip index climbed to the brink of 10,000 on Monday as geopolitical tensions from the US capture of Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro sent traders scrambling for safety.
Gold miners like Endeavour Mining and Fresnillo jumped over 4%, while defence heavyweights BAE Systems surged 4.5% and Babcock hit all-time highs.
The precious metals rally reflected classic risk-off positioning, investors piling into haven assets as headlines turned dark.
Gold futures shot up 2.6% to $4,443 per ounce, while oil initially dipped as markets weighed longer-term Venezuelan supply implications.
The overall reaction suggests measured concern rather than panic.
UK regulator demands answers from Elon Musk’s Grok
Britain’s media watchdog Ofcom issued urgent demands to X and xAI on Sunday, seeking explanations for how Grok generated sexually explicit imagery of children and undressed photos of real people without consent.
The controversy erupted after the AI chatbot’s December feature enabled users to digitally remove clothing from images, a capability swiftly weaponised across the platform.
Grok acknowledged “lapses in safeguards” but stopped short of a genuine apology.
The backlash has turned international: France reported the content to prosecutors, India demanded corrective action within 72 hours, and the EU called the material “illegal.”
Creating or distributing such deepfakes violates UK law, and platforms face legal liability for failing to prevent distribution.
Elon Musk’s deflection only intensified scrutiny.
Denmark PM warns Trump’s Greenland threat is genuine
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen issued an urgent statement Sunday, asserting that President Trump genuinely intends to seize Greenland, this time backed by military muscle after capturing Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro.
“It makes absolutely no sense,” Frederiksen declared on Facebook, demanding Washington cease “threatening a historical ally.”
Her warning came hours after Trump doubled down aboard Air Force One, citing national security and claiming Denmark couldn’t handle Arctic defence.
Greenland’s PM Jens-Frederik Nielsen fired back, calling Trump’s rhetoric “disrespectful” and firmly rejecting annexation fantasies, though notably open to dialogue through “proper channels.”
Orban sees energy windfall as Venezuela coup stabilises oil
Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban praised the US military capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on Monday, framing it as an energy policy masterstroke for global markets.
Speaking at Budapest’s annual international press conference, Orban argued that Washington and Caracas combined would control 40-50% of world oil reserves, sufficient to significantly depress energy prices.
For Hungary, perpetually dependent on Russian oil and gas, cheaper global crude translates directly into relief on energy bills ahead of April elections, where inflation has battered its poll numbers.
Orban has secured a one-year Trump exemption from US sanctions on Russian energy imports, but lower global prices would provide additional relief.
His calculation: Trump needs cheaper energy to fund his economic agenda, and Venezuela’s integration into the Western orbit could deliver it.
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