ROI-What just happened? The financial week in five charts
The opinions expressed here are those of the authors.
By Anna Szymanski
June 12 (Reuters) - Every Friday, Reuters Open Interest (ROI) will provide you with a wrap-up of the financial week that was with five key charts. We'll highlight major trends – but also surprising and sometimes overlooked moves.
We've said a lot this week, so now we'll let the data do the talking.
(1) LOSS LEADER

ANNA SZYMANSKI, ROI Editor-in-Charge: IPOs from loss-making companies have in the past two years represented an increasingly large share of total IPO proceeds - amid the rising AI boom - after equity issuance plummeted in 2022 with the rise in interest rates. This trend now looks set to kick up a notch with the blockbuster $75 billion IPO from Elon Musk's SpaceX, especially with both OpenAI and Anthropic coming down the pike. Is this simply laying the groundwork for the next technological era or a sign of overexuberance? Or both? Only time will tell.
(2) END OF AN ERA?

RON BOUSSO, ROI Energy Columnist: OPEC's share of global oil production has plummeted since the start of the Iran war and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The producer group will likely find it hard to build back its strength.
(3) NIMBY

MIKE DOLAN, ROI Finance & Markets Columnist: Just one in three Americans approve of the fast pace of the data-center construction supporting artificial intelligence and most would oppose having one built in their own community, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll.
(4) SAFETY LAST

JAMIE MCGEEVER, ROI Markets Columnist: Gold, the classic "safe haven" hedge against inflation and geopolitical risk, is tumbling, even as inflation is rising and geopolitical risk remains sky-high. It is down nearly 30% from its January peak above $5,500/oz and is on the cusp of breaking below $4,000 for the first time since November.
(5) COMEBACK

Liquefied natural gas demand in Asia is quietly recovering from the shock of losing almost 20% of global supply to the Iran conflict as top buyer China shows signs of returning to the market. The biggest-importing region is on track for arrivals of 21.83 million metric tons in June, the most for five months and also up year-over-year, according to data compiled by commodity analysts Kpler. Asia's LNG imports had dropped to a six-year low of 18.74 million tons in April after the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz halted shipments from Qatar, which shipped 80.9 million tons in 2025.
Opinions expressed are those of the authors. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
