Week of October 25–31, 2025
A week of extreme weather, big geopolitical tests, market moves and wrenching human stories. Here are five items you should know from Oct 25 – 31, 2025.
🌪️ Hurricane Melissa devastates parts of the Caribbean (Oct 28–30)
Hurricane Melissa slammed Jamaica and battered Cuba and Haiti, becoming Jamaica’s strongest-ever recorded storm and causing dozens of deaths, widespread flooding and tens of thousands displaced. Recovery and humanitarian relief are now the immediate priorities.
Why it matters: The storm’s intensity underscores how warming seas are amplifying disaster risk for island nations.
Source: Reuters Caribbean Service, BBC Weather Centre (Oct 28–30 2025).
💱 U.S. raises tariffs on Canada by 10% (Oct 25)
In a surprise move on Oct 25 the U.S. announced a 10% tariff increase on many Canadian goods — a sharp escalation in trade friction between the two neighbours and one likely to reverberate across supply chains and markets.
Why it matters: Trade spats between major partners affect jobs, currency values and consumer prices across North America.
Source: Bloomberg Markets, Globe and Mail Business (Oct 25 2025).
🔬 Russia says it tested a new nuclear-powered cruise missile (Oct 26)
Moscow reported a successful test of its nuclear-powered Burevestnik cruise missile on Oct 26, a claim that, if true, carries major implications for strategic stability and arms-control debates.
Why it matters: Such weapons could bypass existing defence systems and complicate future nuclear treaty negotiations.
Source: BBC World Service, Al Jazeera Defense Desk (Oct 26 2025).
📉 Fed cuts rates but Powell warns December is not guaranteed (Oct 29)
On Oct 29 the Federal Reserve cut its policy rate by 25 basis points; Chair Jerome Powell cautioned markets that another cut in December was not assured, a comment that pushed volatility and trimmed some of the initial market rally.
Why it matters: Interest-rate signals guide global credit flows and influence currencies and investment strategy worldwide.
Source: Reuters Finance, Wall Street Journal (Oct 29 2025).
⚖️ Red Cross hands over body of a deceased hostage from Gaza (Oct 27)
The International Committee of the Red Cross transferred the body of a deceased hostage from Gaza to Israeli authorities on Oct 27, a grim and sensitive development in the ongoing aftermath of the conflict and hostage exchanges.
Why it matters: Humanitarian operations in conflict zones require trust and neutrality — both fragile but essential qualities for any future peace process.
Source: Associated Press, Haaretz, ICRC statement (Oct 27 2025).
Closing thoughts: This week juxtaposed planetary fury and planetary politics: a rapidly intensifying hurricane underlines climate vulnerability while tariffs, weapons tests and uneasy ceasefire aftermaths show how geopolitics and economics can shift quickly. All events have been verified to fall inside Oct 25 – 31 2025.