The strategic failure of more

I view the current state of Netflix, Paramount+, and Peacock not as a triumph of choice but as a crisis of product design.

These platforms have pivoted from being "services" to being "warehouses."

They have successfully engineered a product that achieves a rare, impressive level of user friction by mistaking a vast ocean for a useful resource.

The problem, streamers are now content oceans.

An ocean is deep, dark, and overwhelming. When a user opens an app, they aren't looking for an expedition; they are looking for a stream.

Stream = directional, focused, and flowing. It suggests a curated path and easy decisions.

Ocean = massive, distracted, and churning. It forces the user to become a navigator, leading to decision paralysis.

The current streaming model has become a burden on the consumer with four specific failures:

1. Boring: By chasing "broad appeal" algorithms, platforms have diluted their brand identities. When everything is for everyone, nothing is for anyone.

2. Endless: The infinite scroll is a UI trap. Without "finishing lines" or curated endpoints, the experience feels like a chore rather than an escape.

3. Expensive: We aren't just paying in dollars; we are paying in cognitive tax. Spending 15 minutes searching for 20 minutes of entertainment is a poor ROI.

4. Discordant: The interfaces are cluttered with "trending" rows that ignore personal taste, creating a jarring, noisy environment that lacks a cohesive editorial voice.

So, what strategic pivot is needed?

Simple.

The industry must return to the "stream."

Success in 2026 won't belong to the biggest library, but to the most intentional one - see Crunchyroll.

Cancellation is the only metric that matters now—and it’s a loud signal that users are tired of drowning.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc.

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global.

*****

Marc A. Ross is a geopolitical strategist and the founder of Caracal Global, a fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer service for Fortune 1,000 companies and private equity firms. He publishes the Caracal Global Daily — what a Chief Geopolitical Officer monitors every morning. Subscribe at caracal.global/contact.

March was the warmup. April is the test.

Well, March 2026, that was fun. Certainly not a slow news month, more like a stress test.

In thirty-one days, the United States launched a war with no exit plan, the Western alliance declined to show up for it, and a California jury told Silicon Valley its design choices are now a legal liability. Humanity aimed four astronauts at the Moon while geopolitics aimed everything else at the boardroom.

In March, three geopolitical business issues crystallized in ways that global executives and private equity leadership need to understand — not as background noise, but as operating conditions.

Issue One: The war that has no off-ramp

A month ago, the United States went to war with Iran. Markets called it a shock. Allies called it a warning. Washington called it a win.

Thirty days later, here's the ledger. The Strait of Hormuz is closed—roughly 20% of the world's oil and 25% of global LNG transit passes through that waterway. Gulf producers have cut output anywhere from 25% to 80%. Amazon has imposed a 3.5% fuel surcharge on North American merchants. Japan's chemical sector is watching its profit outlook darken. South Korea's consumer inflation is accelerating. Oil briefly touched $150 in Oman. And the administration, fresh from President Trump's prime-time address vowing to send Iran "back to the Stone Ages," offered no exit, no timeline, and no diplomatic strategy for ending any of it.

Here's the framing worth adopting: this is not a crisis with a resolution date. It is a structural repricing of energy risk. CFOs who built Q2 guidance on pre-war energy assumptions need to revisit those numbers. The scenario in which the Strait stays closed through the summer is not a tail risk. It is the base case.

The Economist put it bluntly in its framing of what China is thinking: never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake. Beijing is watching the US deplete its military toolkit in the Gulf and quietly building another naval base in the South China Sea. Trump's Beijing visit has been postponed until May. The autocratic coordination between China and Russia — shared media, forums, personnel exchanges, drone technology flowing to Tehran — is not abstract analysis. It is the operational infrastructure currently in place, while Washington's attention is occupied elsewhere.

What must executives do?

1. Run Gulf exposure scenarios now, not when this resolves. Map your supplier dependencies, logistics vulnerabilities, and energy cost assumptions against 60 and 90 more days of Hormuz closure. The companies that fare best amid sustained geopolitical disruption are those that understood the risk before the quarterly call.

2. Stress-test your Q2 and Q3 energy models. If your projections assumed normalization following a US military exit, rebuild them from scratch. A theater's withdrawal announcement does not reopen a waterway. That is a physical and operational reality.

3. Get ahead of your board communications. Investors are watching. Directors are asking. The companies that explain the risk before they're forced to explain the damage are in a fundamentally different governance position than those that don't.

Issue Two: The alliance that isn't

Here is what happened in March. The United States went to its allies and asked for help opening the Strait of Hormuz. France said no. Canada said no. Spain, Italy, and Poland all declined. Europe said no — collectively, formally, and on the record.

This ask-and-rejection will be studied in foreign policy programs for a generation. For the executives reading this, it has a more immediate meaning: the Western alliance architecture your company has operated within for 80 years now has a visible crack. Not a hairline fracture. A load-bearing one.

Per the Financial Times, that fracture is now running through day-to-day working relationships at the staff and intelligence level. Poland's prime minister declared that Trump is executing Putin's dream plan. Austria refused US overflight requests. Macron told reporters one shouldn't speak every day, which, as European diplomatic understatements go, is as close to a public rebuke as you're likely to get.

For multinationals, this is not an abstract diplomatic dispute. When alliance relationships deteriorate at the operational level, the downstream effects reach trade negotiations, regulatory coordination, and market access decisions.

Three business implications follow.

First, you cannot manage transatlantic exposure with a single government affairs strategy. Export controls, sanctions compliance, data governance, and AI regulation: these were already moving in different directions between Washington and Brussels. They are now moving apart with political legitimacy on both sides. You need distinct, jurisdiction-aware approaches — and you need them now.

Second, the China window is open, and Beijing knows it. Companies with significant China exposure need to ask a harder question: what decisions is Beijing making this quarter, in the window of reduced US attention? The autocratic coordination documented by the US counterterrorism community this month is not a think-tank concern. It is a commercial risk.

Third, stakeholder expectations in European markets are shifting. Institutional investors, government counterparts, and enterprise clients are watching how American companies navigate their government's posture. Silence is a position. Miscalibrated messaging in either direction carries real costs.

Issue Three: The new battlefield is digital, spatial, and legal

March delivered three signals on technology and sovereignty that belong together even though they arrived from different directions.

The first came from a California courtroom. A jury found Meta and Google liable for the mental health damage their platforms caused a young woman who became addicted to Instagram and YouTube as a teenager. The damages were $3 million. The exposure waiting in the queue is potentially multibillion. The legal theory that landed — that intentional design choices that cause demonstrable harm create corporate liability — extends well beyond social media. Any company whose products, platforms, or services touch youth engagement now has heightened legal exposure. The California verdict is not a tech story. It is a corporate governance story.

The second came from low Earth orbit. On Wednesday evening, four astronauts climbed into an Orion capsule and began the first crewed journey to the lunar vicinity since 1972. Artemis II is not a science mission. It is a geopolitical statement. China has a lunar program. Beijing has landed robotic missions on the far side of the Moon. It has announced a crewed landing target of 2030. It has explicitly framed lunar exploration as a strategic priority — not for scientific discovery, but for territorial positioning, access to resources, and the soft power that comes from planting a flag where others haven't reached. The Moon's south pole sits atop water ice that can be converted to rocket fuel. Whoever establishes extractive infrastructure there controls a logistics node for everything that comes after. If you're in aerospace, advanced manufacturing, or materials, the procurement pipeline flowing from Artemis II is worth mapping now.

The third signal came from the information environment. Iran's AI-assisted disinformation campaign is not targeting defense ministries. It is targeting employee news feeds and customer social media timelines. The communications resilience question, once a PR function, has become a board-level governance issue. Meanwhile, OpenAI just closed a funding round valuing the company at $852 billion, with 40% of its $2 billion in monthly revenue now coming from enterprise sales. AI is no longer primarily a consumer product. It is B2B infrastructure at scale, and the corporate adoption curve is steeper than most boardrooms are planning for.

Two strategic imperatives on technology. First, commission a platform and product audit. Identify every engagement mechanism in your technology stack or partner ecosystem that could be characterized as intentionally addictive, particularly with youth-facing exposure. This is legal risk management, not public relations. Second, establish a baseline on your AI information environment. Who is shaping the narratives reaching your employees and customers? How would you know if state-sponsored content were already embedded in those channels?

The theme underneath all three

March did not produce three separate crises. It produced one structural condition, expressed across three domains. Geopolitical volatility is no longer episodic. The Iran war, the Western alliance fracture, the domestic political ruptures within the Trump coalition, the AI governance acceleration, the lunar race — these are not disruptions that resolve into a stable baseline. The baseline has moved.

Your competitors are responding strategically. Are you responding reactively?

Tariff volatility. NATO credibility erosion. Supply chain disruption. Chinese competition. AI and tech sovereignty. Export control tightening. Interest rate uncertainty. These forces are reshaping your capital allocation, supply chain strategy, and competitive positioning right now. Caracal Global monitors these signals daily and translates them into what they mean for your business — helping your board move from reacting to strategizing.

Caracal Global is your fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer. Michigan-born, DC-based, operating at the intersection of globalization and American politics. Intelligence, Strategy, and Communications — for Fortune 1000 companies and PE portfolio firms that need geopolitical capacity without the overhead of a full-time hire. Learn more at caracal.global.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc.

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global.

*****

Marc A. Ross is a geopolitical strategist and the founder of Caracal Global, a fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer service for Fortune 1,000 companies and private equity firms. He publishes the Caracal Global Daily — what a Chief Geopolitical Officer monitors every morning. Subscribe at caracal.global/contact.

One month in. The bill is coming due.

A month ago, the United States went to war with Iran. Markets called it a shock. Allies called it a warning. Washington called it a win.

Thirty days in, here's what we know. 

The Strait of Hormuz is closed. A fifth of the world's oil consumption is offline. Gulf producers have cut output anywhere from 25% to 80%. Amazon has imposed a 3.5% fuel surcharge on merchants across North America. Japan's chemical sector is watching its profit outlook darken. French industry is absorbing the energy hit. South Korea's consumer inflation is accelerating. 

Trump delivered a prime-time address this week. He vowed to send Iran "back to the Stone Ages." He offered no exit, no timeline, and no diplomatic architecture for ending this. Macron told reporters that one shouldn't speak every day. Poland's prime minister said Trump is executing Putin's dream plan. Austria refused US overflight requests. The coalition is not holding.

Here's the pattern worth naming: this is a war without an off-ramp, managed by an administration that has not built the infrastructure to end it. The gap between Trump's public posture and the operational reality on the ground is now measured in weeks of compounding cost — not hypothetical scenarios. And while Washington's attention is fixed on the Gulf, China is quietly building another military base in the South China Sea. The Economist's framing this week on what China is thinking was blunt: never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.

The corporate implications are not theoretical. They are arriving now. Energy costs are repricing across every sector that touches fossil fuels or petroleum-derived inputs. Supply chains reliant on Gulf routes are under active strain. US financial institutions in European capitals are adjusting physical security protocols following threat warnings. And every board that has not run a scenario analysis of what 60 or 90 more days of Hormuz closure would mean for its operations is already behind.

What must executives do? Run the scenarios now — not when this resolves. Map your Gulf exposure, supplier dependencies, and logistics vulnerabilities. Get ahead of the communications: boards are asking, investors are watching, and the companies that fare best through sustained geopolitical disruption are the ones that understood the risk before the quarterly call, not the ones scrambling to explain it afterward.

This is precisely the moment that separates companies with the capacity for geopolitical intelligence from those without. Caracal Global provides fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer services — intelligence, strategy, and communications — for senior executives who need that capacity without the overhead of a full-time hire. 

If the Iran escalation and the Hormuz crisis are now on your board's agenda and you don't have a geopolitical officer in the room, that's the conversation we should be having. Learn more @ caracal.global.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global.