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Daily Morning Briefing

Saturday, 9 May 2026

Weekly recap · Trump's three-day Russia–Ukraine ceasefire begins today · Victory Day parade in Moscow · week ahead headlined by US April CPI
Europe/Rome 06:00 · Markets closed · Sixth straight up-week · CPI Tuesday

Top of the morning

Markets snapshot — Friday close (weekend levels)

Cash markets are closed; figures below are Friday's close or the latest available print. Asia opens Sunday evening Rome time; European cash open Monday at 09:00 CET.

InstrumentLastChange / context
S&P 5007,398.93+0.84% Fri · +2.3% wk · record close
Nasdaq Composite26,247.08+1.71% Fri · +4.5% wk · record close
Dow Jones49,609.16+0.02% Fri · ~+0.2% wk
STOXX 600modest weekly gain in local FX · capped late by EU tariff threat
FTSE 100−1.26% wk · politics-driven
DAX+0.19% wk
FTSE MIB+2.16% wk · best in Europe
Hang Seng (Fri)−0.85% Fri · Iran/Hormuz nerves
CSI 300 (Fri)4,871.91−0.58% Fri
US 10y Treasury4.362%−~3bp Fri · two-week low
UK 30y gilt~5.54%−~6–8bp Fri post-Starmer comments
EUR/USD1.1748+0.19% Fri · 3-week high · hawkish ECB pricing
GBP/USD~1.36firmer · vs EUR ~0.864
Brent crude~$103range-bound · war premium drain has paused
WTI crudelow-mid $90schoppy on Hormuz skirmish flow
Gold~$4,720+>2% wk · highest since 22 Apr

Geopolitics & weekend watch

The single most consequential event today is in Moscow: the Victory Day parade with Xi and other foreign leaders in attendance, mapped onto a Trump-brokered 9–11 May ceasefire that is already under strain. The structural read is unchanged — Ukraine is planning around a long-arc war, Russia is using the parade week to project status and lock in optionality, and the ceasefire window is theatre rather than a settlement. Watch three things over the weekend: the actual drone count tonight versus the ceasefire framework, any changes in Russian framing of conditions for extension, and whether Witkoff–Yermak talks produce a public read-out before Monday's open. Defence equity bid (Rheinmetall, BAE, Leonardo, Hensoldt) remains structural and is unlikely to be sold on a three-day pause.

The Iran track is now bifurcated cleanly: a diplomatic line via Pakistan toward a one-page MOU on enrichment moratorium, asset unfreeze and Hormuz security, and an operational line where CENTCOM has just announced an open passage through the Strait. The skirmish residue has not gone away, which is why gold has not been sold and oil is no longer falling in a straight line. Israel's first strike on Beirut since the Lebanese ceasefire keeps the Hezbollah front re-armed as a tail risk; for Italian energy and EU LNG security planners, Adnoc's behaviour earlier in the week of switching off AIS transponders to push Gulf LNG through Hormuz is the more durable signal than any single diplomatic press release. China has used the week to remind the US that "compliance" runs both ways — blocking new bank loans to a US-sanctioned refiner and the implicit Nvidia/Alibaba/Thailand trail.

Central banks & the rate-cut narrative

The April Employment Situation has done the heaviest lifting of the week. The combination of better-than-feared payrolls, sticky 4.3% unemployment and a clear cooling in average hourly earnings is the cleanest "low-hire, low-fire, lower-pressure" print the Fed could have hoped for ahead of CPI next Tuesday. Money is still pricing the Fed sitting at 3.50–3.75% into 2027, but the dispersion has widened — a downside CPI surprise on Tuesday opens the door to the September meeting being live, and a strong CPI print can just as easily push the next cut into early 2027. The sequencing matters because equity leadership is leaning so heavily on the AI capex / mega-cap tech complex that any meaningful repricing of the front-end will hurt valuation more than earnings. Friday's Treasury rally was a clean expression of that: yields lower, equities higher, cyclicals modestly lagging tech.

In Europe the picture is mirrored. Hawkish ECB voices (Nagel, Kazimir) earlier in the week have been validated by EUR strength and money-market repricing; the Council split over a June hike is now a meaningful probability rather than a tail. The BoE post-decision tone is what GBP at ~1.36 is digesting; politics from the local elections is the local risk to gilts but, with Starmer staying for now, the immediate fiscal-loosening tail has been priced down. Hungary continues to flag a possible June rate move on a strong forint. For physician–investor types, the practical takeaway: long-duration healthcare equities and biotech remain a leveraged play on the rate path, and Tuesday's CPI is the next inflection.

Big Tech, AI & corporates

The China-tech decoupling story moved from background to foreground this week. The Bloomberg-broken Nvidia/Alibaba/Thailand chain (Bangkok-based OBON Corp routing $2.5bn of Super Micro servers to Chinese end-customers) is not a one-off anecdote; it implies the export-control architecture is leaking through intermediaries that Washington only intermittently sees. China responded operationally — pausing new loans to a US-sanctioned refiner, blocking Meta's Manus AI deal, quietly tightening on outbound capital. Apple's late-stage AirPods-with-camera testing is the consumer-side illustration of the same pressure: control the device, control the input layer, reduce dependence on partners. For the index, this remains a tape that rewards mega-cap tech while the underlying structural risk increases — a tension the equity market has been quite content to ignore as long as earnings deliver.

Around the edges. Datadog's largest one-day move in six years on a guidance raise capped a strong tech-earnings week. Vodafone's $5.8bn UK telco buyout consolidates UK mobile. Apple is reportedly preparing to let users choose rival AI models in iOS 27 features — a Google/Anthropic distribution-funnel positive. Samsung crossed $1tn in valuation. Wall Street bonus pools are now guided up, with M&A bankers tagged for a 20%+ pop. The Pulitzer Prizes 2026 went to Bloomberg News for the trAPPed graphic investigation into India's wave of digital arrests — niche but worth flagging for EM-fintech and India-digitalisation read-throughs.

Health & science (worth a glance)

The physician-shortage thread that started as a political story is now structural. The administration has walked back parts of the overseas-physician crackdown, but the AY 2026–27 residency and fellowship pipelines for the 1 July start are functionally locked in — meaning the service-line impact is already determined for this autumn. DOJ's UCLA medical school case opens a fresh DEI-in-medical-education front whose downstream effects on the match and on residency program funding are not yet priced in. Adjacent: the cruise-ship hantavirus cluster — high case fatality (~30–40% in severe HPS) but very low person-to-person transmissibility — is the kind of outbreak whose pandemic-tail framing was overstated all week; the more durable angle is travel and reinsurance exposure to cross-border detection gaps, where Bloomberg Businessweek's framing has more legs than the public-health one.

On the AI-in-clinical-workflows track, ambient documentation tooling is the most consequential near-term lever for clinician throughput; the AirPods camera concept is upstream of the same direction of travel. GLP-1 demand metrics remain firm into the second half despite ongoing supply normalization; the Businessweek thread on midlife-male preventive cardio / TRT demand is a useful demand-side marker rather than a clinical signal. Watch for follow-ups on antibiotic stewardship and new RSV antiviral data into the AHA / IDSA cycles later this year.

Week ahead (CET)