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Daily Morning Briefing

Sunday, 3 May 2026

Markets & geopolitics — Sunday wrap, Monday open setup
Europe/Rome 06:00 · Weekend tape — cash markets reopen Monday

Top of the morning

Markets snapshot

Levels as of Friday 1 May US close (latest available; cash markets shut over the weekend). Sourced from Bloomberg Europe homepage; cross-checked against Reuters, CNBC, FXStreet.

InstrumentLastChange
S&P 500 (cash)7,230.12+0.29% · 6th wkly gain
Nasdaq Composite25,114.44+0.89% · record
Dow Jones Industrial49,499.27−0.31%
FTSE 100~10,180pared losses, thin holiday tape
Stoxx 600 / DAXclosed FriMay Day holiday — reopen Mon
US 10y Treasury~4.40%below 4.45% post-FOMC
EUR/USD~1.176touched high 1.1767
GBP/USD~1.34range-bound
Brent crude~$108.9eased on Iran-talks softening
WTI crude~$1062nd weekly gain risked
Goldnear recordgeopolitical bid intact

Geopolitics & oil

The Iran war is now the controlling variable for both crude and US foreign-policy posture, and the weekend tilted the signal back towards risk-on for oil and risk-off for diplomacy. The IRGC's "fully prepared" warning, Trump's rejection of Tehran's latest offer, and his "treasonous to say we aren't winning" remark all sit in tension with the still-technical 8 April ceasefire. The supertanker crossing of Hormuz is a small positive operational data point but does not change the strategic picture: the US blockade of Iranian ports remains, ~2,000 ships are still stranded, and supertanker premiums for Gulf transit stay extreme. Brent has eased back into the high $100s but the supply-chain plumbing remains broken.

The European theatre delivered three substantive moves in 48 hours: the 5,000-troop Germany drawdown is now formal; the open question over Italy and Spain is live; and the 25% auto-tariff threat is the single most expensive piece of news for European industrial earnings since the war began. For Berlin and Brussels the security-autonomy debate has accelerated — the defence-equity bid is already pricing it. Watch German political signalling on rearmament timelines and the EU Council response to the auto threat over the next 72 hours.

Fed, ECB & rates

The April FOMC held with three dissents. This past week, three of the dissenting officials publicly tied their position to rising uncertainty — softer growth on one side, energy- and tariff-driven inflation on the other. Bond traders are now hedging both cuts and hikes, which is unusual and maps onto a steeper long end. The 10y has settled in a 4.40–4.45% range; the 2s10s curve has restepended. The Bank of England's sole dissenter publicly pushed for quick rate hikes; the ECB's Makhlouf flagged that upside inflation risks have intensified. The global central-bank reaction function is rotating hawkish at the margin even as growth wobbles.

Powell's chairmanship is widely expected to end in May; Kevin Warsh remains the consensus successor. The political optics of any cut into a tariff-and-energy-driven inflation impulse get materially harder. Diary: ADP Wednesday, ISM Services Tuesday, ECB minutes mid-week, US Nonfarm Payrolls (April) Friday — the single-largest data risk of the week.

Big Tech & AI

Apple is the through-line into Monday. Beat-and-raise on services, the Mac Mini price hike to $799, and Cook's explicit memory-cost commentary keep the AI-hardware bottleneck story very much alive. The Mac Mini bump is the cleanest single data point of the week — when Apple, of all companies, passes through DRAM cost into a flagship consumer SKU, the squeeze is real and persistent. Hyperscaler capex remains the demand sink; Meta's $19.84bn Q1 capex and the Bloomberg reporting on AI-fuelled big-tech borrowing are the other side of the same trade.

Around the edges: eBay rallied on a report that GameStop is preparing a takeover bid; Anthropic's Mythos drew Fed Governor Bowman into commentary on the dynamic nature of AI tools; OpenAI's CFO talked about a "vertical wall of demand"; and the Musk-vs-OpenAI trial had a difficult first week for Musk's side. Cerebras is reportedly targeting up to a $4bn IPO. The IPO window is open in selective AI-infrastructure names, and Meta acquired a robotics-AI company over the weekend to build out its humanoid effort.

Health & science (worth a glance)

Two threads relevant to a clinician. First, J&J's ketamine derivative Spravato is now a $1.7bn franchise per Bloomberg — a meaningful proof-point for the broader interventional-psychiatry pipeline (Seaport's debut on Friday rallied 10% on the same theme). Second, Moderna's CEO commented on flu shots and skin-cancer trial progress; the mRNA platform's oncology read-throughs remain one of the more interesting clinical stories of 2026. Tangential but interesting: BMO is using AI and quantum computing to predict earthquakes, a small case study in domain-specific AI deployment beyond LLMs. Bloomberg Businessweek's piece on ABA-therapy commercialisation is also worth a look from a clinical-ethics angle.

Week ahead (CET)