The European Credit Executives Network is a group dedicated to European credit professionals as they navigate the risks and opportunities unique to the Eurozone. Group members are encouraged to ask questions, discuss solutions, and talk about their experiences and challenges. All FCIB members are invited to join – whether they work and live in the EU, or just have customers and colleagues that do. Group registration is free for all FCIB members.
This presentation provides a concise assessment of the geopolitical and economic risks facing Europe in 2026, drawing on key findings from the World Economic Forum’s Global Risk Report, the latest Middle East developments and their implications for energy, trade, and financial stability, and a forward‑looking view of expected economic and political shifts that may influence credit conditions, payment behavior, and cross‑border collections across European markets.

In his work for Marsh McLennan, a global professional services firm in risk, strategy and people, Christopher has led the Geopolitical and Economic Risk Analysis team within the firms’ Credit Specialties practice since 2023. Among a variety of offerings, the team provides political and economic risk assessments and analysis, as well as sector-specific insights for clients and internal applications. Prior to joining Marsh, Chris worked at Darktrace on critical infrastructure cyber security issues and he holds master’s degrees from Sciences Po, Paris, and the London School of Economics in international affairs and global security issues.
| January 15 | July 16 |
| February 19 | August 20 |
| March 19 | September 17 |
| April 16 | October 15 |
| May 21 | November 19 |
| June 18 | December 17 |
The presentation explores why the current energy crisis—triggered by rising tensions and conflicts in Iran—poses far greater global risks than the commonly cited statistic that “20% of the world’s oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz” suggests. It outlines how even a partial disruption in this chokepoint can trigger cascading effects across global trade, shipping routes, insurance markets, and energy pricing. The talk explores both the immediate shock to oil and gas supply chains and the longer-term structural consequences for inflation, manufacturing, and geopolitical alliances. It also examines how uncertainty itself becomes an economic force, amplifying volatility in commodity markets and reshaping investment decisions worldwide. Ultimately, it’s not just about oil flows—it is about the fragility of interconnected global systems and the outsized impact of regional conflict on the world economy.

Fred Dons is currently the Head of Trade Finance at Stavian Singapore and has worked in trade finance for more than 30 years at various international banks like ABN, AMRO and Deutsche Bank and most recently before joining Stavian, was recently the Head of Structured Trade Finance at Aria Commodities. Fred started in trade finance operations in 1989 with AMRO Bank before moving to Albert de Bary Bankiers Rotterdam in 1991. In 2003 he became Head of Trade Finance Operations for DB Amsterdam but left the bank in 2004 to become Head of the European Document Check Team at ABN AMRO before returning to DB in 2006. At DB he served amongst others as Head of Trade Finance as well as Head of Commodity Finance. During his banking years Fred Dons was a member of the National Committee for the ICC and the Dutch Bankers Association, working on the UCP, UDRG, ISBP and other rules and regulations for Trade Finance.