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Daily Morning Briefing

Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Markets & geopolitics — Hormuz still hot, ECB hawks louder, ADP day
Europe/Rome 06:00 · European cash open setup · Japan, Korea on holiday earlier in the week — fully back today

Top of the morning

Markets snapshot

Live levels from the Bloomberg Europe ticker just before 06:00 Rome. Asia / oil / FX cross-checked against Reuters, FT, CNBC, Business Standard. EU cash open in roughly three hours.

InstrumentLastChange / context
S&P 500 (live)7,203.94±0.36% · Bloomberg wrap leans risk-off on Hormuz
Nasdaq Composite25,083.68±0.12% · big-tech holding the highs
Bloomberg 500 (B500)2,600.31+0.33%
FTSE 10010,363.93+0.14% · energy / defence bid
Nikkei 225~60,500back from holiday week, still near record territory
MSCI Asia ex-Japan−0.3% · Hormuz overhang
US 10y Treasury4.44%unchanged · curve a touch steeper
EUR/USD1.17+0.18% · ECB hike repricing
GBP/USD1.35+0.32%
Brent crude (CO1)~$110.5+5.3% on Bloomberg gauge · Hormuz fire-fight
WTI crude (CL1)$105.28+3.28%
Gold$4,532.10+2.42% · safe-haven bid

Geopolitics & oil

The simple read on the morning: the ceasefire is broken in everything but name. CENTCOM has confirmed an active engagement in the Strait, Iran has fired on the UAE for the first time since the truce, and Treasury is publicly pressing China and the wider coalition to commit to the US escort operation. Hegseth and Caine framed the truce as still legally in place but Project Freedom and the new Iranian transit-permission protocol have created two parallel rule-sets in the same waterway — the kind of structural contradiction that resolves badly. Maersk's vessel-extraction under naval escort and its planning around a permanent Hormuz-bypass route are the practical signals that shipping is no longer pricing this as a transient disruption — and oil markets agree.

The European theatre adds two angles. Brussels has counter-measures ready on Trump's auto-tariff threat but is publicly asking for restraint; the auto basket is the cleanest equity proxy at the open. And Moscow's unilateral 9 May ceasefire-with-warning frames the next four days for Kyiv. From a Rome perspective the Meloni government's Azerbaijan energy push is the relevant local sub-plot — Italy is positioning ahead of any further Middle-East supply disruption, with the energy ministry repositioning import flows.

Central banks & rates

Pendulum has swung visibly hawkish on the ECB side over the last 24 hours. Kazimir called June "all but inevitable", Nagel separately said the case for a hike exists even without further inflation evidence, and Villeroy publicly pushed back saying it's too early. The euro-zone consumer-inflation expectations survey reads upside risk as transitory but the hawk wing of the Council is now clearly looking through that. The cleanest expression remains the front of the EUR curve and the Bund-Treasury spread, which is tightening this morning. Lagarde is using public remarks to push the structural argument — Europe needs to cut energy-import reliance — which conveniently doubles as a reason to keep the inflation guard up.

On the Fed side, Bowman flagged consumer fraud as a financial-system risk, the DOJ's Pirro is asking a judge to toss the earlier ruling on Fed subpoenas — keeping the political pressure on the institution alive — and Bill Dudley wrote that he sees no good reason for Warsh to push for cuts. Today's data: the April ADP employment print at 14:15 Rome is the headline, followed by mortgage-applications and the 30-year auction. Bigger event remains Friday's nonfarm payrolls. Lower-for-longer at the front, structurally steeper at the back, with energy now adding back to the inflation hedge bid.

Big Tech, AI & Wealth

The week's AI-capex thread keeps building. The reported White House push for pre-release model vetting would be a meaningful regulatory shift if it materialises — likely positive for incumbent labs with mature safety teams, friction-creating for open-source releases. Brockman's $30bn personal mark on his OpenAI stake is the cleanest public valuation update in months and useful for benchmarking the rest of the private-AI cohort. Apple plans to let users pick rival AI providers across iOS 27 features and is opening up Wallet to user-built passes. Larry Fink predicts a futures market for compute power — a notable signal from the world's largest asset manager that infrastructure-as-commodity is the next leg.

Around the edges: Apollo's Zito argued credit is the safer place in a high-volatility regime, with Blackstone's data-center REIT IPO seeking to raise $1.75bn. Blackstone and KKR are reportedly in talks with Google to bring AI models to portfolio companies — a private-markets / hyperscaler convergence story. Bloomberg flags an AI-driven hidden uplift to Northeast US power bills — the same demand-side story now showing up in retail electricity. RBC is launching a public debt fund as retail rotates out of private credit. FedEx and UPS sold off on what Bloomberg framed as a "watershed" Amazon logistics move.

Health & science (worth a glance)

Two threads relevant to a clinician this morning. First, Bloomberg published a long-form on the FDA's internal turmoil under Marty Makary — paranoia, leadership churn and policy backlash — which has direct read-through to drug-approval timelines and the regulatory backdrop on novel modalities through year-end. Second, a Big Take on ABA, America's most-used autism therapy and also its most controversial — relevant from a clinical-ethics and commercialisation angle as private equity continues consolidating the space. Bloomberg also flagged a hantavirus outbreak on a cruise ship in its explainers — niche infectious-disease story but the kind of zoonotic transmission narrative that occasionally moves travel and reinsurance equities. Bloomberg Pursuits has a piece on midlife-male "hotspan" pressure that's tangential to the GLP-1 / longevity-clinic commercial thread.

Today's calendar (CET)