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Daily Morning Briefing

Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Trump–Xi summit eve · Iran ceasefire "totally unacceptable" rejection · Aramco flags fuel stocks "critically low" · Starmer faces cabinet showdown · Korea AI-tax overhang persists · US PPI 14:30 CET
Europe/Rome 06:00 · Hormuz week 11 · oil still bid · US PPI 14:30 CET · UK IP · IT Q1 GDP final · Cisco AMC

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 Tuesday's close 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-PPI
Crude (WTI front-month)$99.20+1.15% · Hormuz week 11, product scarcity
FTSE 10010,269.43+0.36% · gilts soft on Starmer headlines
Gold (XAU spot)$4,731.60+0.06% · holding the bid
EUR/USD1.18+0.23% · dollar easing
GBP/USD1.36+0.20% · sterling steady through cabinet day
Shanghai Composite−0.40% · supported into summit window
Nikkei 225digesting BOJ June-hike signal
Samsung Electronics279,000 KRW−2.28% · AI-tax overhang holds

Geopolitics & today's watch

The Iran file is the operational and political pivot of the day. Trump's overnight characterisation of Iran's offer as "totally unacceptable" and the ceasefire as on "massive life support" is the framing the summit goes in with. Underneath the rhetoric the WSJ's report that Tehran has come back with a new proposal on uranium is the substantive opening; the question is whether Beijing brings any leverage to the table on Chinese purchases of Iranian crude. The operational signals are still escalating — Iran's mini-submarine deployment in the Strait, AIS scrambling around Hormuz, and Aramco's Nasser now flagging product-side ("critically low" fuel stocks) rather than crude-side scarcity. Morgan Stanley's "race against time" framing on Hormuz is the cleanest sell-side line. US sanctions on more entities and individuals over Iran oil sales went out overnight, hardening the enforcement posture. The trade is still long Brent vol, long European refining-margin pain, and long the Italian/Spanish equity relative call.

The UK is the cleanest live political event in the European session. Starmer's "last-ditch" cabinet bid today is the make-or-break moment; the FT and Bloomberg both describe the Labour Party mood as "pretty ugly." Mahmood's privately-advocated orderly transition, the four resigning aides last weekend, the seventy-five-plus MPs demanding a timetable, and Catherine West's pivot to a September parliamentary canvas all point to a transition measured in weeks rather than days — which is itself why sterling held 1.36 and gilts only softened modestly. Burnham remains the favourite per Bloomberg's MP backing read; Streeting and Rayner are the dark horses; Mahmood is now visible enough to be a candidate in her own right. Martin Wolf's Tuesday FT column on protecting Britain "against the tyranny of the minority" is the elite-consensus line on what a Reform government would mean.

Three adjacent threads. First, Trump claimed Russia and Ukraine agreed a 3-day ceasefire and prisoner swap; operational verification is thin and Zelenskyy's former chief of staff has been formally accused of money laundering 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 per the FT; European defence procurement remains the cleanest structural buy in the equity complex, and Helsing's $18bn-round print is the venture echo. Third, South Africa: Ramaphosa publicly said overnight he will not resign and will fight the impeachment process — Bloomberg's Justice Malala column reads his political days as numbered regardless. EU politics: the FT-Bloomberg parallel reads on Ursula von der Leyen being increasingly seen as "too powerful" by member states is a slow-burn dynamic to track into the autumn.

Central banks & the rate-cut narrative

Today's US April PPI is the macro pivot. The pipeline-price tell matters more than usual: with Hormuz in week eleven and Aramco flagging product-side scarcity, the question is whether the energy passthrough has finished climbing or is still moving up the supply chain. Around the print, the Senate procedural votes on Kevin Warsh's Fed-chair nomination have cleared the first hurdle and the next confirmation step is in motion this week; Powell's term expires Friday. Goolsbee continues to say all options are on the table; the BLS schedule for the rest of May is the relevant secondary calendar. The September-cut conversation is alive again after yesterday's CPI; the cleanest expression in the curve is the front-end stillness with a long-end steepening bias on fiscal headlines (the Trump fuel-tax holiday and beef-import-tariff moves are the new fiscal-loosening tells).

Europe is mirroring the US picture but cleaner. Money markets still price better than 75% odds of an 11 June ECB hike with more than 50bp of tightening through year-end; Lagarde's "torn between too early and too late" framing remains the candid version. The PBOC's overnight warning on imported inflation is the polite acknowledgement that everyone is digesting the same energy passthrough, but Beijing is keeping its rate-cut option open through the Trump–Xi window. The BOJ's June-hike signal is now in the price; the JGB demand confirms domestic positioning. Ignazio Angeloni's FT column on whether the ECB will shift tack on the digital euro is worth reading; the BoE's supply-shock framing post-Megan-Greene continues to do the analytical work for sterling. Italy's Q1 GDP final print today is the European data event.

Big Tech, AI & corporates

The composition story is now clearer than the level story. Bloomberg's Markets Daily piece reads investors cheering as Alphabet goes from "AI zero to hero"; the FT's chart pack puts the semiconductor sector as the carrier of most of the $5.4tn aggregate gain since the Iran war began. Microsoft's targeted $92bn return on its early OpenAI investment is the cleanest number yet on the platform layer's economics, while OpenAI's trial — the Musk lawsuit heads into its final week, with Altman due to testify and Nadella having already called the boardroom attempt to remove Altman "amateur city" — keeps the governance overhang live. Chris Hohn's TCI cutting $8bn off its Microsoft stake citing AI software-disruption risk is the most respected long-only hand reframing the upside case. Anthropic's reported $1tn-valuation conversation lands as the speculative bookend; Burry's 2000-echo warning is the recurrent counterweight, not yet a tradeable signal. Around the deal tape: Sony–Blackstone music rights (~$4bn), ServiceNow $4bn bond sale, GitLab cutting jobs to spend on "agentic era" growth, KKR's $300m injection into a struggling private credit fund, Cisco prints after the bell as the read on enterprise networking demand.

EM and the rest of the tape: India's foreign-investor exit hit a record per the FT, the rupee weakened on the energy shock; Toyota will build a new Indian SUV plant; the FT's "factory workers abandon jobs as city life gets too expensive" piece is the labour-side echo of the same fuel-price story. Aramco missed profit estimates despite the war-driven oil rally — useful tell on how much of the oil move is volume vs price. UK fintech Wise made its dual US trading debut; Activist Palliser built a stake in EQT-target Intertek. Citigroup hired senior bankers in infrastructure and South Africa from JPMorgan. Macquarie's commodities boss was paid more than its CEO as profits soared. ByteDance, Alibaba, Boeing and Ford-CATL are the names to watch through the Beijing summit window; the Bloomberg "Big Take" on Boeing's bet on Trump and China is the strategic read.

Health & science (worth a glance)

The Canary Islands hantavirus cluster shifted from headline to operational overnight: evacuation of the cruise ship began in Tenerife per the FT, the Nebraska isolation cohort holds, and three further evacuees tested positive in the past 24 hours. Clinical framing is unchanged — high case fatality (~30–40% in severe HPS), very low person-to-person transmissibility, surveillance gap rather than pandemic mechanism — but the cross-border detection question is now the right framing for inbound-port screening protocols and for travel-medicine teaching this autumn. Italian colleagues at the airport medical posts should keep the differential live for returning Atlantic-route cruise passengers, particularly for the prodromal flu-like presentation.

Three institutional reads worth flagging. First, the FT's NHS-Palantir reporting that contractors will have "unlimited access" to patient data is 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 problems 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; pair with the FT's "women bearing the brunt of AI displacement in administrative roles" as the labour-economics shadow within healthcare admin and revenue-cycle. Third, the Bloomberg Businessweek piece on midlife men under pressure to extend "hotspan" rather than healthspan is the consumer-medical longevity-market read; Novo Nordisk handing a Parkinson's therapy to a Zuckerberg-backed startup is the venture move worth tracking on the neurodegenerative pipeline. The Supreme Court order extending abortion-pill-by-mail access keeps US clinical-access policy live for the autumn term.

Week ahead (CET)