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Daily Morning Briefing

Wednesday, 29 April 2026

Markets & geopolitics — overnight wrap
Europe/Rome 06:00 · Bloomberg-sourced read from your live session

Top of the morning

Markets snapshot

Live Bloomberg ticker as of read; futures and opens move quickly.

InstrumentLastChange
S&P 5007,140.50+0.47%
Nasdaq24,678.72+0.84%
Bloomberg 500 (B500)2,574.15+0.52%
FTSE 10010,332.79+0.11%
US 10y Treasury4.35%unch
EUR/USD1.17+0.09%
GBP/USD1.35+0.14%
Crude oil (WTI)$99.99+3.76%
Gold$4,609.10+1.80%

For context, Tuesday's US cash close: S&P 500 −0.49% to 7,138.80, Nasdaq −0.9% to 24,663.80, Dow essentially flat. Today's pre-open shows a modest rebound bid.

Oil & geopolitics

Iran is still the dominant macro thread. WTI is back near $100, up almost four percent on the session, with the UAE's planned May OPEC exit layering a structural shift on top of the cyclical war premium. Trump's response to Tehran's Hormuz-for-blockade-lift offer reportedly comes down to the missing nuclear element — Rubio's framing was that any deal must definitively prevent a sprint to a weapon. The ceasefire holds technically, but the blockade is the leverage.

Inflation expectations are responding. Treasuries softened on the oil bid, and the World Bank now projects commodity prices at a four-year high in 2026. Bank of Canada is expected to hold despite the oil shock. Bloomberg's Big Take on "the billion-barrel Hormuz oil shock" argues demand destruction is the next leg — worth a read for the Fed-pricing implications.

Tech & AI

The OpenAI growth-doubt narrative is the live tech story. Tuesday's tape took the hit; today the company is publicly defending its trajectory. The structural shift is Microsoft relinquishing exclusivity on OpenAI distribution, which clears Amazon to resell — a meaningful change in cloud-AI economics. Adjacent threads: Google has been cleared to sell its AI for classified Pentagon work, and Bloomberg estimates the AI buildout will triple the US power-equipment market to $65bn. Musk's lawyer's "mockery" jab at Altman is noise but adds to the legal-overhang theme around OpenAI's structure.

Europe & UK

FTSE 100 is barely positive at the open (+0.11%); banks are leading on the broader continent ahead of a heavy earnings cluster — Barclays, UBS, Deutsche Bank, BNP Paribas all reporting this week. ECB and BoE both decide tomorrow. King Charles addresses the US Congress today, with Bloomberg's read that the visit lands at a low point in the so-called "special relationship," and downside risk if a UK envoy's recent remarks on US ties are read as official policy.

Brussels is exploring rolling over Covid-era debt as spending pressures build — early signal for the joint-debt debate ahead of summer. Commerzbank pushed back sharply on UniCredit's takeover overtures, an escalation in a 19-month campaign. Barclays' £66bn non-bank-lending exposure stays in the headlines next to Dimon's credit-cycle warning. Bank of Italy urged the Meloni government to keep a tight eye on spending.

Asia overnight

Bank of Japan's hawkish hold leaves JPY as the actionable trade — watch for MoF rhetoric if it slips further. Citadel's Dubai green light is the financial-services counterpoint to the Gulf-tension story. Indian markets continue to absorb US–Iran war volatility; Bloomberg's "where to invest 10 lakh rupees" piece reflects domestic positioning around it. China-side, Longi reported a wider Q1 loss; Bloomberg Explainers continue to flag China's affordable AI as a competitive concern for Silicon Valley, with the Manus-Meta acquisition under regulatory cloud.

Today's calendar (CET)