Investing in Unstable Markets: How to Evaluate Geopolitical and Security Risks
17.10.2025
17.10.2025
In today’s globalized economy, emerging and frontier markets continue to offer immense growth potential — untapped consumer demand, competitive talent, resource access, and the chance for first-mover advantage. But the opportunity comes with volatility.
Geopolitical and security risks — including war, political instability, cyber threats, sanctions, or social unrest can dramatically alter business outcomes. Investors need a sharp, proactive strategy to navigate these risks without missing out on long-term value.
Let’s explore how to evaluate unstable markets, why investing during volatility can be strategic — especially in countries like Ukraine, and how firms like Molfar can provide intelligence support to minimize risk and maximize resilience.
Despite their challenges, high-risk markets often contain the highest untapped upside.
Risk-aware companies that invest wisely during turbulent times often emerge as market leaders once stability returns.
Risk categories to help investors assess and mitigate exposure:
Track changes in:
Build best and worst-case scenarios (e.g., new government, regional conflict)
Model how each outcome would impact your business:
On-ground validation is critical. Public data can be biased, incomplete, or outdated.
Molfar is a private intelligence firm. We specialize in risk assessment, due diligence, and threat monitoring for businesses and investors in high-risk environments.
Despite being in an active war zone, Ukraine is not a dead market — it is a transforming one. Companies already operating in the country have strong incentives to continue investing.
In mid‑2025, the UK’s Octopus Energy, together with Ukrainian energy group DTEK, announced plans to raise €100 million (~US$115 million) over three years for up to 100 solar + battery projects across Ukraine.
Why notable: Ukraine remains under war conditions, with much of its centralized power generation damaged. This investment in distributed renewable + storage is both a resilience play and a bet on reconstruction and long‑term stability.
At the Defense Tech Valley forum in Lviv (Sept 2025), several Western firms committed over $100 million in investments into Ukraine’s defense tech/cybersecurity sector.
Examples: Dutch fund NUNC Capital (~€20 million) for scaling defense companies, German‑Luxembourg fund Verne Capital pledged up to €25 million.
Why this is interesting: They’re investing in high-tech/military areas, which come with regulatory, reputational, and physical risks. But the strategic alignment with NATO‑oriented standards and demand in unstable contexts makes them willing to undertake those risks.
CRH, a major global building materials company, has kept investing in its operations in Ukraine despite the ongoing war.
Examples: maintenance, energy efficiency upgrades, logistics terminal expansion. They invested ~€80 million in production, including logistics, in factories in places like Kamianets‑Podilskyi, Odesa, and Mykolaiv. They’re also planning to add a new line in Berezan for special construction materials.
Significance: The building materials industry is particularly exposed — transport/energy/logistics risk, yet essential for reconstruction. CRH demonstrates how established firms manage risk vs opportunity trade‑offs in unstable zones.
Savvy investors know that stability is not required for profit — clarity is. If you have real-time intelligence, strong local partners, and an adaptive model, you can outpace competitors who wait on the sidelines.
Firms like Molfar act as your eyes and ears, allowing you to make informed moves even in foggy conditions. In markets like Ukraine, this can be the difference between panic and progress.
If you’re considering investing in Ukraine or another high-risk market:
Because in emerging markets, the real risk isn’t investing — it’s investing blind.
If you're exploring opportunities in Ukraine or other volatile regions, Molfar can help you map risk, validate partners, and build a resilient investment strategy. Contact us.