News Briefing

Middle East Shock Reshuffles Global Risk Map as Investors Respond in Real Time

May 12, 2026News Briefingwww.henleyglobal.com

The latest Henley & Partners–AlphaGeo Global Investment Risk and Resilience Index (GIRRI 2026) shows a rapid re‑ranking of country risk after the US‑Israel war on Iran, with investors repricing exposure by the hour.

Index snapshot

  • Data cut‑off: Country Risk Premium (CRP) as of 1 April 2026, combined with client‑demand trends from the same period.
  • Method: Structural resilience (long‑term factors) overlaid with real‑time market signals and investor behaviour, producing a “live” risk hierarchy.

Traditional safe havens remain at the top

Rank Country
1 Switzerland
2 Denmark
3 Sweden (up 2 places)
4 Singapore
5 Norway (down 2 places)

These Nordic and Singaporean jurisdictions retain their positions thanks to long‑standing institutional discipline and market trust rather than any recent improvement.

Notable movers among large economies

  • China – rises 6 places to #31, reflecting improving market sentiment.
  • Canada – falls 4 places to #15, the largest drop within the G7.
  • United States – unchanged at #24.
  • United Kingdom – unchanged at #19.
  • Germany, Japan, and Italy each edge up modestly (Germany #8, Japan #26, Italy #35).

Emerging economies gaining ground

  • India – up 40 places to #64.
  • Philippines – up 40 places to #74.
  • Türkiye – up 32 places to #88.
  • Mexico – up 30 places to #66.
  • Morocco – up 28 places to #70.

These gains are driven by perceived policy credibility, strategic trade positioning, and capacity to absorb volatility, rather than overnight fundamental changes.

Countries falling sharply

  • Belarus – down 57 places to #117.
  • Bolivia – down 28 places to #134.
  • Ukraine – down 28 places to #131.
  • Bosnia & Herzegovina – down 32 places to #89.

The declines reflect exposure to conflict, sanctions, or fiscal fragility.

Investor demand trends (Q1 2026 vs. Q4 2025)

  • Residence / citizenship programs with the strongest application growth:
    • Greece + 61 %
    • Italy + 43 %
    • Malta + 38 %
    • Nauru + 200 %
  • Programs with declining demand:
    • Portugal − 37 %
  • Enquiries up markedly:
    • New Zealand + 165 %
    • Costa Rica + 44 %
    • Türkiye + 35 %

Overall, applications originated from over 70 nationalities across more than 40 different residence and citizenship programmes since January 2026.

Middle‑East conflict impact

  • The Iran war has heightened geopolitical risk, especially around the Strait of Hormuz, adding a persistent risk premium across energy and strategic sectors.
  • In the Gulf, enquiries from UAE‑based clients are up 41 % with applications rising 26 %, while interest in UAE “golden visas” fell 14 %.
  • The UAE’s decision to exit OPEC signals a move toward greater strategic autonomy in a volatile energy environment.

Europe under pressure

  • Core European economies remain relatively resilient, but the region faces structural strains: weak growth, energy vulnerability, and political fragmentation (e.g., recent defeat of Hungary’s Viktor Orbán).
  • Europe’s central role in global energy and financial transmission channels amplifies both its resilience and its exposure to external shocks.

Implications for investors

  • No single jurisdiction now offers comprehensive protection; investors are increasingly building multi‑jurisdictional “sovereign portfolios” to preserve flexibility, security, and control.
  • Decision‑making must adapt to a landscape where risk is continuously repriced rather than episodic, emphasizing diversification across stable, accessible, and opportunistic jurisdictions.

The full report and underlying datasets are available on the Henley & Partners website.

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