The ceasefire between the US and Israel and the Islamic Republic of Iran may prove to be more than a pause in hostilities. It is also a pause for reflection, particularly for global investors trying to make sense of a world that no longer behaves according to familiar rules.
If the past decade was defined by globalization and efficiency, the current moment is shaped by strategic alignment. Supply chains are being redrawn, alliances are being tested, and capital, arguably the most sensitive indicator of all, is beginning to move accordingly. One of the more interesting outcomes of this shift is a reassessment of Israel’s role in global portfolios.
For decades, Europe occupied a default position in the international allocation strategies of American investors. That status is now under quiet but noticeable pressure. The gap between the US and Europe is widening across several dimensions: regulatory frameworks, industrial priorities, and geopolitical positioning. This divergence is increasingly reflected in investor behavior, with a growing number of projects being delayed, scaled back, or redirected.
The Middle East tells a different story but leads to a similar conclusion. For years, investors simplified the region into binaries: stable vs unstable; insulated vs exposed. That simplification no longer holds.
Recent events have shown that even markets perceived as stable can face sudden disruptions. Infrastructure, operations, and supply chains are all more vulnerable than previously assumed. At the same time, Israel has functioned under sustained pressure without a systemic breakdown in economic activity. This does not eliminate risk, but it changes how that risk is understood.
Another factor entering the equation is alignment, particularly between the US and Israel. This is no longer limited to diplomatic or military coordination. Increasingly, it is expressed through shared systems, joint technological development, and overlapping strategic priorities. From an investment perspective, alignment reduces friction. And in a world where friction is rising almost everywhere else, that matters.
Globally, investors are not choosing between perfect options. They are choosing between different types of uncertainty. Asia offers scale, but also carries systemic geopolitical risk. Europe offers institutional depth, but faces structural challenges. Emerging markets offer growth, but often lack stability.
Against that backdrop, Israel is being reassessed not because it has become risk-free, but because its risk profile is increasingly familiar. And familiarity, in uncertain environments, has value.
Investors are beginning to ask where systems continue to function under stress. That is a different question. And it leads to different answers. Israel is now part of that conversation in a way that it wasn’t before.
The writer is co-founder of Varana Capital.