From Battleground to Balance Sheet
I’ve seen my fair share of grand peace deals announced with champagne and ceremony, only to fizzle out before the ink is dry. So, when I hear the term “peace dividend,” my cynical eyebrow tends to twitch. But every so often, a situation comes along that feels, well, different. The recent UAE-brokered agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia in the South Caucasus is one of those moments. For decades, this was a region you’d only read about in grim geopolitical reports. Now, it’s shaping up to be a rather interesting investment frontier.
The core idea is simple. When nations stop spending fortunes on fighting, that money, and a great deal more in foreign investment, can flow into something productive. Think of it like two neighbours who finally stop building taller fences and instead decide to pool their resources to build a shared swimming pool. The centrepiece here is the Zangezur Corridor, a new trade route that could stitch the region into the fabric of global commerce between Europe and Asia. According to research from Nemo, this shift from conflict to construction often creates powerful, long-term tailwinds for specific sectors.