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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

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.

InstrumentLastChange / context
S&P 5007,412.84+0.19% · near record
Nasdaq Composite26,274.13+0.10% · near record
BBG B5002,673.38+0.21%
US 10y Treasury4.42%flat · pre-CPI
Crude (WTI front-month)$99.20+1.15% · Hormuz risk back, week-10
FTSE 10010,269.43+0.36% · gilts firmer
Gold (XAU spot)$4,731.60+0.06% · holding the bid
EUR/USD1.18+0.23% · hawkish ECB pricing
GBP/USD1.36+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 Electronics279,000 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)