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Daily Morning Briefing

Friday, 8 May 2026

Markets & geopolitics — Tehran's reply due via Pakistan, oil melts further, US payrolls land 14:30
Europe/Rome 06:00 · Consolidation after record · NFP day · Russia Victory Day eve

Top of the morning

Markets snapshot

Live levels from the Bloomberg Europe ticker after a fresh reload, just before 06:00 Rome. Asia overnight cross-checked with CNBC. European cash open in roughly three hours; US payrolls at 14:30.

InstrumentLastChange / context
S&P 500 (futures)7,378.81+0.19% · sitting on yesterday's all-time closing high
Nasdaq Composite (futures)25,945.93+0.41% · tech still bid pre-NFP
Bloomberg 500 (B500)2,659.55+0.05% · barely changed
FTSE 10010,276.95−1.55% · giving back part of the +2.15% rip
Nikkei 225~62,600−0.36% · profit-taking off Thu's record (62,833)
KOSPI−0.67% · cooler after taking 7th-largest crown
US 10y Treasury4.36%+0.13bps · ahead of NFP
EUR/USD1.18−0.14% · range-bound
GBP/USD1.36+0.13% · post-BoE digestion
WTI crude (CL1)$91.97−3.27% · war premium continues to drain
Brent crude (CO1)~$96−2.84% · matching WTI lower
Gold$4,750.90+1.21% · safe-haven re-bid; the cleanest tell

Geopolitics & oil

The frame this morning is "we are still in the optimistic-pricing window, but the safe-haven hasn't been sold." Iran is expected to send its formal answer to the one-page US memorandum within two days, with Pakistan running point on the back-channel. The text reportedly contemplates a 30-day staged process — end-of-conflict declaration, asset unfreeze, Hormuz security, nuclear track — but the sequencing question remains the live wire. Three things to note for the tape: (1) gold up another 1.2% says the diplomacy is not yet underwritten, (2) Adnoc going dark on AIS transponders to push LNG through Hormuz says one of the most compliant Gulf operators is treating the maritime risk premium as structural, (3) Bloomberg's own framing of dried-up oil-market liquidity says the moves we see are partly mechanical thinness, not just news.

Two side fronts to flag. First, Israel's first strike on Beirut since the ceasefire restarted the Lebanon timer — Bloomberg's explainer ties the Hezbollah front directly into the Iran war and Stavridis argues Gulf tankers need protection regardless of the deal. Second, Russia's pre-9 May Victory Day posture is escalatory: Moscow has publicly told foreigners to leave Kyiv, even as the unilateral ceasefire technically holds. Ukraine's chief negotiator is en route to Witkoff but Bloomberg's read is that Kyiv is now planning around a "crucial winter" — i.e., a long arc, not an imminent settlement. Italy/ENI angle: Bloomberg-adjacent thread on Adnoc and Hormuz LNG keeps the Europe-supply story relevant heading into autumn.

Central banks, rates & payrolls

Today's binary event is the US April Employment Situation at 08:30 ET / 14:30 Rome. Consensus on payrolls is roughly +55–75k (FactSet 70k, IBKR predmkt 73k, Bloomberg poll narrower), unemployment held at 4.3%, hourly earnings +0.3% m/m. ADP earlier in the week printed +109k vs expectations, so the bar is sturdier than headline forecasts imply. The "low-hire, low-fire" frame remains the dominant Wall Street pitch. A meaningful downside surprise is the cleanest path to the rate-cut narrative reasserting itself after Musalem (risks tilt back to inflation) and Goolsbee (don't front-run productivity) tried to lean hawkish into this week's risk-on tape. The 10y at 4.36% gives back close to nothing on Hormuz de-escalation — the Treasury market is signalling relief, not regime shift.

BoE was yesterday and the post-decision tone is what GBP at 1.36 is digesting now. Across the Channel, ECB-side hawks (Nagel, Kazimir) made the case for a June hike on prudential grounds earlier this week; Villeroy's pushback keeps the Council split visible into 11 June. NY Fed's Survey of Consumer Expectations showed short-term inflation expectations edging up — a small thread to track but not enough alone to move the front of the strip. Hungary is now signalling June for a potential rate move on the strong forint. Net on rates today: NFP is the only thing that matters; everything else is wallpaper.

Big Tech, AI & corporates

The AI-capex thread keeps the equity-tape leadership but the news inside the names is increasingly mixed. Apple is reportedly preparing to let users choose rival AI models across iOS 27 features — that is a Google/Anthropic distribution-funnel positive and a watch-out for Apple Intelligence stickiness. Datadog had its largest one-day move in six years on a guidance raise, Peloton lifted full-year outlook (turnaround tone validated), DeepL is cutting 25% of staff (translation/incumbency stress from the LLM tier). Samsung crossed $1tn in valuation — Korea's index leadership is starting to show in the company-by-company tape. China blocked Meta's $2bn Manus AI deal; Anthropic continues to push consumer-facing Claude positioning and AI agents for financial services workflows.

Around the edges. Vodafone is consolidating UK telco at $5.8bn. AirAsia signed a major Airbus A220 order — a pure narrow-body story, positive read for Bombardier's old line and Mirabel. The Duke of Westminster is selling £700m of US real estate. Citigroup's new profitability target was framed as "underwhelming" by the Street; Wall Street bonuses are guided up, with M&A bankers tagged for a 20%+ pop. Tenaris's Paolo Rocca stepped down after 24 years. Bloomberg-side: the Pulitzer Prizes 2026 went to Bloomberg News for the trAPPed graphic investigation into India's wave of digital arrests — niche, but worth flagging given the EM-fintech and India-digitalisation read-throughs.

Health & science (worth a glance)

Two threads to keep on the radar. First, the cruise-ship hantavirus cluster: health officials are now publicly downplaying pandemic risk — accurate, given hantavirus pulmonary syndrome's high case fatality (~30–40% in severe HPS) is matched by very low person-to-person transmissibility. The cluster will still get scrutiny on rodent-control and HVAC vectors aboard the vessel, and Bloomberg Businessweek's framing — that the outbreak exposed travel's cross-border detection blind spot — is the more durable angle for travel and reinsurance equities than the pandemic-tail read.

Second, the physician-shortage thread is now structural. Bloomberg's update: the administration is walking back parts of its overseas-physician immigration crackdown, but applicants are warning it may already be too late to meet the 1 July 2026 residency and fellowship start dates — meaning the AY 2026–27 pipeline impact is locked in. DOJ has accused the UCLA medical school of selecting students based on race, opening a fresh DEI front in medical education. Adjacent: the "hotspan" Businessweek piece on midlife-male longevity pressure (not a clinical signal, but a useful demand-side marker for GLP-1 / TRT / preventive-cardio service lines).

Today's calendar (CET)