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Daily Morning Briefing
Tuesday, 12 May 2026
CPI day · Trump–Iran ceasefire "on life support" · Starmer cabinet split, Home Secretary pushes orderly transition · Samsung slumps on Korea AI-tax floater · BOJ flags June hike · Trump–Xi summit Thursday
Europe/Rome 06:00 · Oil bid, Hormuz now 10 weeks shut · US CPI 14:30 CET · DE ZEW 11:05 · UK labour data
Top of the morning
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CPI day arrives into a tape that already absorbed a record close and a re-priced Iran outlook
The single event that defines today is the US April CPI print at 14:30 CET (8:30 ET). Consensus stays where it was a week ago — headline +0.6% m/m / +3.7% y/y, core +0.3% / +2.7% — but the inputs have moved underneath it. The Hormuz disruption is now ten consecutive weeks, Aramco's CEO publicly warning the closure may not normalise until 2027, and the headline number will be more heavily loaded with energy passthrough than the consensus track implies. The cleaner read sits in core services. A downside core surprise re-opens the September-cut conversation; a hot print pushes the next Fed move into early 2027 and lands on a tape where the S&P 500 sits at 7,412 and the Nasdaq at 26,274 — both within touching distance of last week's records. Front-end vol stayed contained overnight; the bond market's tell at 8:31 ET is the cleanest read on whether the soft-landing equity multiple still holds.
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Trump–Iran: ceasefire "on massive life support", Hormuz "100 million-barrel" loss baked in
President Trump's Monday line characterising Iran's reply as a "piece of garbage" he "didn't even finish reading" hardened the diplomatic break that opened at the weekend. The ceasefire is publicly framed as "on massive life support"; some Trump aides are now described as more seriously considering a resumption of major combat operations. The operational signals are tracking the rhetorical ones: Iran has reportedly deployed mini-submarines into the Strait, AIS ship-signal scrambling around Hormuz has intensified, and Aramco has put a roughly 100-million-barrel cumulative loss figure on the disruption. Brent and WTI extended their gains in the overnight session — the Bloomberg ticker reads crude +1.15% — and the supply story now has an explicit duration: Saudi Aramco's CEO said normalisation may push into 2027 if the corridor is not reopened within weeks. For European equity the read is unambiguous: energy bid, refiners and integrateds the leadership names, downstream-heavy industrials and air carriers the drag.
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UK politics: Mahmood pushes orderly transition, four aides quit, leadership challenge crystallising
Yesterday's "I'm not going anywhere" speech did not hold. By Monday night Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood was reportedly privately advocating for an orderly transition; four government aides had quit citing loss of confidence in the prime minister; the count of Labour MPs publicly calling for Starmer to set a departure timetable had passed seventy-five. Catherine West, after dropping her formal Monday-deadline challenge, has refocused on canvassing the parliamentary party for a September timetable. The named alternatives — Burnham, Streeting, Rayner, Mahmood herself — are now visible; Bloomberg's reading is that Burnham retains the strongest internal MP backing. Gilts firmed at the long end overnight as the market priced down the immediate fiscal-loosening tail of a chaotic transition; today's UK March/Q1 labour-market data lands into this. Sterling held ~1.36 on the Bloomberg tape. Today's cabinet meeting is the live event.
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Korea's AI-tax "citizen dividend" jolts markets — Samsung off, the cross-asset signal is bigger
A top South Korean policymaker floated the idea over the weekend that the country should pay citizens a dividend funded by excess AI profits. The market read it immediately as a windfall-tax risk to the chip champions: Samsung opened lower and was down roughly 2.3% to 279,000 KRW. The intellectual frame matters more than the price action. Goldman has been writing about an "AI-driven super surplus" accruing to Korea and Taiwan as the upstream beneficiaries of the global capex wave; once a sovereign frames that surplus as fiscal space, the policy template can travel. The cross-asset takeaway for Luca's exposure is that the AI-equity leadership thesis depends not just on demand and unit economics but increasingly on whether governments tax the rent. Today the trade is single-name (Samsung), but the structure of the conversation has shifted.
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BOJ signals June hike chance; Japan 10-year demand stronger than the 12-month average
The Bank of Japan signalled overnight that a rate hike next month is on the table, citing inflation risks; the framing has tightened from "data-dependent" to "watching for the trigger." The 10-year JGB auction this morning printed a bid-to-cover stronger than the 12-month running average — a clean tell that domestic real money is comfortable adding duration into the hike, which itself is a soft endorsement of the BOJ's framing. Finance Minister Katayama publicly noted FX coordination with Treasury Secretary Bessent en route to China, a quiet signal that yen weakness past 150 against the dollar would be uncomfortable for both capitals ahead of the Thursday summit. Spending data showed Japanese households cutting back even as wages keep growing — the BOJ's harder problem and the structural reason the cycle stays shallow even when the next move arrives.
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Trump–Xi Thursday: trade, Iran, Taiwan and rare earths on the table
The mechanics of the Thursday–Friday Beijing summit are now in the public domain. Thursday opens with a welcome ceremony, bilateral talks and a state banquet; Friday is a "working lunch" before Trump returns. The US delegation is going in with the economy and Iran as priorities — Chinese purchases of Iranian crude is the explicit ask, with Boeing and agricultural commitments the carrots — while Beijing is leading with Taiwan and seeking US scale-back on security commitments. Rare-earth export controls, AI cooperation and a proposed bilateral Trade Board sit underneath. The Bloomberg-reported Ford–CATL battery JV is the goodwill anchor going in; Nvidia's CEO skipping the trip is the visible counterweight. For markets, the practical near-term read is that any concrete commitment on Iranian-crude purchases reads as a positive supply signal into oil; absence of any commitment confirms the harder line. Equities trade the symbolism, futures trade the supply maths.
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AI capex squeezes free cash flow to a decade low — Anthropic eyes $1tn, Hudson River prints $6.4bn
The FT's running tally puts Big Tech's AI capex bill at roughly $725bn and notes that the biggest groups' free cash flow has compressed to a decade low even as headline market value rises. Two underline reads. Anthropic is reportedly weighing a financing round at a valuation near $1tn on the back of revenue surge; Hudson River Trading printed $6.4bn in Q1 trading revenue and Jane Street's haul ($16.1bn quarter) keeps re-rating the proprietary-trading complex. The composition story is clearer than the level story: the AI-and-flow leadership in equity is real but the cash conversion is materially worse than the 2023–24 phase. Chris Hohn's TCI cutting its Microsoft stake by $8bn citing AI disruption-of-software risk is the cleanest expression of that thesis from a respected long-only hand. Michael Burry separately warned the tech rally is echoing the 2000 peak — recurrent reminder, not yet a tradeable signal.
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Around the tape: Sony–Blackstone music rights, British Steel nationalised, Spirit collapse rolls on
Sony agreed to buy Blackstone's portfolio of music rights for close to $4bn — the latest leg of the catalogue-as-asset story. The UK government will take full ownership of British Steel, formalising what had been a politically uncomfortable stop-gap. Spirit Airlines' bankruptcy adviser fees crossed $80m and counting. Lotus is in talks to throw a lifeline to a troubled UK car plant. Germany's KNDS is pushing Berlin to decide on a state stake before its IPO; Helsing's drone-startup valuation may print at $18bn in its next round. Eon is in line to take over UK supplier Ovo. ServiceNow plans a $4bn bond sale; Stellantis is reshaping European carmaking via its Leapmotor deal; Apollo and Blackstone are reportedly weighing a $35bn financing for Broadcom. India's foreign-investor exit hit a record high — the rupee weakened as the energy shock fed through.
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Health, AI in medicine, and the clinician's weather report
Three threads to track. (1) The Canary Islands hantavirus cluster on the evacuated cruise ship: three further evacuees tested positive overnight, and the cohort isolation has expanded into Nebraska as US citizens are repatriated. The clinical framing remains the right one — high case fatality (~30–40% in severe HPS), very low person-to-person transmissibility, surveillance gap rather than pandemic mechanism. (2) The Bloomberg Businessweek read on wearables increasingly using AI to predict health problems before they manifest is a marker for where the consumer-medical interface is heading; pair with the FT's Palantir-NHS contract reporting (unlimited contractor access to patient data, per the FT) as the institutional flipside. (3) The Supreme Court's order extending abortion-pill-by-mail access is the immediate US clinical-access story; the women-in-administrative-roles AI displacement piece in the FT today is the labour-side read on AI penetration in healthcare administration and revenue-cycle.
Markets snapshot — live levels at the Rome open
Levels read this morning from Bloomberg's live homepage ticker via Control Chrome. US cash equity values reflect Friday/Monday closes carried into pre-open; oil is intra-session; Asia values are this morning's prints where labelled.
| Instrument | Last | Change / context |
| S&P 500 | 7,412.84 | +0.19% · near record |
| Nasdaq Composite | 26,274.13 | +0.10% · near record |
| BBG B500 | 2,673.38 | +0.21% |
| US 10y Treasury | 4.42% | flat · pre-CPI |
| Crude (WTI front-month) | $99.20 | +1.15% · Hormuz risk back, week-10 |
| FTSE 100 | 10,269.43 | +0.36% · gilts firmer |
| Gold (XAU spot) | $4,731.60 | +0.06% · holding the bid |
| EUR/USD | 1.18 | +0.23% · hawkish ECB pricing |
| GBP/USD | 1.36 | +0.20% · gilt-curve calm |
| Nikkei 225 (today) | — | choppy · BOJ-hike rhetoric |
| Hang Seng (today) | — | supported as Iran risk digested |
| CSI 300 (today) | — | supported into Trump–Xi week |
| Samsung Electronics | 279,000 KRW | −2.28% · AI-tax floater |
Geopolitics & today's watch
The Iran story dominates again and has now shifted from "diplomatic versus operational" to "duration." Aramco's CEO publicly putting a 100-million-barrel cumulative loss figure on the Hormuz disruption — and saying normalisation could slip into 2027 if the corridor is not reopened within weeks — is a different kind of statement from the supply-side superlatives of the last fortnight. It is a forward-looking inventory call, and it changes the term-structure of the oil call from "spike-and-revert" to "level-shift." Trump's rejection of Iran's reply on Sunday in unusually blunt language, the mini-sub deployment reports, the AIS signal scrambling and Bloomberg's note that some White House aides are now more seriously contemplating a resumption of major combat operations all point in the same direction. Pakistan's reported negotiation with Iran for more Qatari LNG to transit Hormuz is the only meaningful operational counter-signal in the past 24 hours — viable corridor, contested politics.
The UK reset is the cleanest live political event in the European session. Mahmood's Monday-night push for an orderly transition, the four resigning aides, the seventy-five MPs publicly demanding a timetable — these are the signals that move sterling. Catherine West's pivot from a Monday-deadline challenge to a September timetable suggests the parliamentary route is now a multi-week process rather than a same-week crystallisation, which is itself why gilts firmed at the long end overnight and sterling is steady. Today's cabinet meeting is the live event; today's UK labour-market data is the macro overlay. Italy and Spain still look better in relative terms within European equity; the FTSE MIB's outperformance of the last fortnight is the clean expression.
Two adjacent threads. First, the FT and Bloomberg both note that Trump claimed a Russia–Ukraine 3-day ceasefire and prisoner swap; the operational verification is thin so far, and Zelenskyy's former chief of staff has been targeted in a major corruption probe — a parallel signal that Kyiv's domestic governance file is now in motion. Second, Germany is moving to buy Tomahawks from Washington despite the Merz–Trump fall-out, with the defence minister flying out this week; European defence procurement remains the cleanest structural buy in the equity complex, and the Helsing $18bn-round print is the venture-side echo.
Central banks & the rate-cut narrative
Today's CPI is the macro pivot of the week and arguably of the month. The consensus pencils +0.6% m/m headline and +3.7% y/y, with core at +0.3% / +2.7%. Two things to watch underneath. First, the energy contribution: with Hormuz now in week ten of disruption, the headline print will carry more passthrough than the equivalent month a quarter ago, and the rates desk will be focusing on whether the OER and core-services components are still rolling over independently. Second, the Fed-chair handover overlay: the Senate is moving on Kevin Warsh's nomination this week (the procedural votes have cleared), and Goolsbee has explicitly said all options are on the table. A clean downside core surprise re-opens the September-cut conversation; a hot print pushes the next move into early 2027 and probably tips the bias for whichever chair walks in. Goldman's house view stays on a December first cut, then March; the curve is priced consistently with that.
Europe is mirroring the US picture, but cleaner. Money markets price better than 75% odds of an 11 June ECB hike and more than 50bp of tightening through year-end; Lagarde's "torn between too early and too late" framing remains the candid version. The PBOC overnight published a warning on imported inflation, which is the polite way of acknowledging the same energy passthrough that everyone else is digesting, but Beijing is keeping its rate-cut option open through the Trump–Xi window. The BOJ's June-hike signal landed cleanly; the 10y demand confirms domestic positioning is comfortable. The BoE post-Greene-comments tone — supply-side shock, not demand pull — is doing the analytical work for sterling at 1.36. Today's UK labour-market data is the live print.
Big Tech, AI & corporates
The AI-and-mega-cap story is shifting in two simultaneous directions. On the bullish side, Bloomberg's Markets Daily reframing of Alphabet — from "AI zero" to "AI hero" — continues, with Microsoft's African data-centre payment dispute and the Bloomberg "Big Take" on Boeing's bet on Trump-and-China sitting around it. On the bearish edge, the FT's running tally of $725bn in AI capex and the resulting decade-low free cash flow is now the institutional consensus, and TCI's $8bn Microsoft-stake cut citing AI software-disruption risk is the cleanest expression. Anthropic's reported $1tn-valuation conversation lands as the speculative bookend; Hudson River's $6.4bn Q1 and Jane Street's $16.1bn keep the proprietary-trading rerating intact. Around the deal tape: Sony–Blackstone music rights (~$4bn), ServiceNow $4bn bond sale, KKR's $300m injection into a struggling private credit fund, Apollo/Blackstone weighing $35bn for Broadcom, Stellantis' Leapmotor deal reshaping European carmaking, and ByteDance flagged for raising AI infrastructure capex 25%. Korea's AI-tax floater is the policy overlay sitting on all of this — the question is no longer whether the AI surplus exists, but who gets to tax it.
EM and the rest of the tape: India's foreign-investor exit hit a record, the rupee weakened on the energy shock; Toyota will build a new Indian SUV plant; Ambani's cola war with Coke and Pepsi continues. Aramco missed profit estimates despite the war-driven rally — interesting tell on how much of the oil move is volume vs. price. UK fintech Wise made a dual US trading debut; Activist Palliser built a stake in EQT-target Intertek. Citigroup hired senior bankers in infrastructure and South Africa from JPMorgan. China expanding industrial dominance was flagged by the US business group; ByteDance, Alibaba, Boeing, Ford-CATL are the names to watch through the Beijing summit window.
Health & science (worth a glance)
The Canary Islands hantavirus cluster expanded overnight: three more evacuees tested positive, US citizens were isolated in Nebraska after repatriation, and Italian port-of-entry surveillance is now the relevant operational angle for European clinicians. The clinical framing remains unchanged — high case fatality in severe pulmonary syndrome, very low person-to-person transmissibility, no plausible pandemic mechanism — but the cross-border detection-gap story is real and is the right framing for inbound-port screening protocols and travel medicine teaching this autumn. Italian colleagues at the airport medical posts should be alert to the differential in returning Atlantic-route cruise passengers.
Three institutional reads worth flagging. First, the FT's Palantir-NHS contract piece reports unlimited contractor access to patient data — a procurement-and-information-governance story that will be cited in European DPA discussions and is directly relevant for any Italian regional health-IT procurement following the same template. Second, the Bloomberg Businessweek read on AI-enabled wearables predicting health events before they manifest is the consumer side of the same trend, with the implication that the front door for many specialist referrals will increasingly be a device alert rather than a primary-care visit; the FT's piece on women bearing the brunt of AI displacement in administrative roles is the labour-economics shadow. Third, on therapeutics: Novo Nordisk handed over a Parkinson's therapy to a Zuckerberg-backed startup — a venture move worth tracking for the longer-arc neurodegenerative pipeline. The Supreme Court extending the abortion-pill-by-mail order keeps US access policy live for the autumn term.
Week ahead (CET)
- TodayTue 12 May · US — April CPI 14:30 CET (cons. headline +0.6% m/m, +3.7% y/y; core +0.3% / +2.7%) · DE — May ZEW 11:05 · UK — March/Q1 labour market data · UK cabinet meeting on Starmer's position · BOJ June-hike signal in focus · Iran 30-day reply window live
- Wed 13US — April PPI 14:30 · UK — March industrial production · IT — Q1 GDP final · Cisco Q3 earnings after the bell · Senate Warsh confirmation vote watch · FT Live Digital Assets Summit (London), Energy Transition Summit (Athens), Brazil Summit (NYC)
- Thu 14Trump arrives Beijing — Trump–Xi summit day one (welcome ceremony, bilateral, state banquet) · UK — Q1 flash GDP 08:00 · JP — Q1 flash GDP overnight · EU — March industrial production · US — initial jobless claims · Walmart Q1 earnings pre-market · Alibaba
- Fri 15Trump–Xi summit day two (working lunch) · Powell's Fed-chair term ends · US — May Empire manufacturing · April retail sales · April industrial production · May U-Mich preliminary 16:00
- WatchIran 30-day window for follow-up reply · Hormuz "weeks ten and counting" · gold $4,731 level · UK leadership challenge crystallisation timetable · Korea AI-tax follow-through · Samsung 279k level
- Ahead11 June ECB (June hike >75% priced) · BOJ June meeting (hike signal live) · Fed 16–17 June (cut probability widening) · UK budget speculation · Trump–Xi commitments follow-through