Markets opened cautiously this morning after news broke that British intelligence had publicly endorsed US military strikes against a Venezuelan gang leader. The Treasury, no doubt relieved that the cost of this particular intervention is being borne by the American taxpayer, issued a rare statement of support. But let’s not mistake this for altruism.
The City understands that organised crime is a friction cost on global capital flows. Every shipment of cocaine that bypasses customs, every money laundering operation that skirts the banking system, represents a deadweight loss to the efficient allocation of capital. In that sense, a precision strike on a 'megacartel' leader is akin to a central bank intervention to remove a market distortion.
The immediate reaction in the foreign exchange markets was a modest strengthening of the dollar, as risk appetite improved slightly. Sterling, however, remained under pressure against the greenback, with GBP/USD dipping below 1.26.
The yield on the 10-year gilt edged up 4 basis points to 4.32%, reflecting a slight shift towards risk-on assets. The FTSE 100 opened flat, with defence stocks like BAE Systems seeing a modest uptick.
But the real story here is the signalling effect. By naming this operation a blow against 'global organised crime', the UK government is effectively admitting that the problem has become systemic. The National Crime Agency’s annual report, released last month, estimated that money laundering costs the UK economy over £100 billion per year.
That’s roughly 4% of GDP, a figure that would make any Chancellor wince. The US strikes, conducted in cooperation with the Venezuelan opposition, targeted the Tren de Aragua gang. This organisation, with tentacles stretching from the prisons of Caracas to the housing estates of South London, represents a particularly egregious example of capital flight.
Its leaders are not just criminals; they are entrepreneurs in arbitrage, exploiting the gap between the formal and informal economies. The efficiency-focused investor should welcome any action that reduces this arbitrage. However, one must question the sustainability of this approach.
The US has demonstrated that it is willing to deploy military force to protect its financial system. But what happens when the next gang leader steps up? The market abhors a vacuum, and the shattered remains of a cartel are fertile ground for new entrants.
We have seen this before in the drug wars of Latin America. The Fed’s quantitative easing may have pumped liquidity into the banking system, but it has also inflated the shadow economy. The solution, if there is one, lies not in surgical strikes but in addressing the underlying fiscal imbalances that create such opportunities.
Until then, gilt yields will remain sensitive to every headline from Caracas. The bottom line is this: British intelligence is right to cheer a tactical victory. But the strategic war against the global black economy requires more than airstrikes.
It requires a fundamental reassessment of how we tax, regulate, and police the movement of capital. Until that day, the only certainty is volatility.










