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20-year Japanese Government Bonds yield slips 10 basis points to 3.680%.
Falling JGB yields modestly eases global bond yields and supports risk assets; mild tailwind for yen-sensitive carry/tech exporters and fixed-income duration demand.
JAPAN 20 YEAR YIELD FALLS 10 BPS
Falling Japan 20-year yields suggest softer Japanese bond pricing/less duration pressure, typically supportive for risk assets and reducing global rate anxiety, with potential USD/JPY tailwinds depending on relative US-Japan yields.
According to Indonesia’s President, all natural resources must be managed to serve all citizens.
Slightly bearish tilt for resource/commodity-linked investors if policy signals tighter state control over natural-resource management; limited direct near-term macro impact unless it implies broader fiscal/export constraints.
Putin: The volume of trade between Russia and China has increased more than 30 times over a quarter of a century
Signals strengthening Russia–China trade ties, modestly affecting regional geopolitics and energy/currency flows more than near-term US equity fundamentals; likely limited direct market impact unless coupled with sanctions/energy disruptions.
According to Chinese state media, Xi Jinping told Vladimir Putin that the world faces the risk of regressing into a “law of the jungle.”
Rhetoric around “law of the jungle” raises geopolitical tension risk, potentially lifting risk premia and adding downside to global risk assets; limited immediate economic linkage for US equities.
According to Indonesia’s President, the nation’s resource wealth can support nationwide welfare if handled in line with constitutional principles.
Headline is political/longer-term on resource governance; limited immediate read-through to global rates or major risk assets.
According to media reports, South Korea’s Labour Ministry says it is too early for emergency arbitration in the Samsung labour conflict, as dialogue remains possible.
South Korea labor-dispute coverage is mostly company-specific; limited spillover to broader markets unless negotiations break down, which would raise near-term risk for industrial/manufacturing output and costs. Likely neutral for equities and FX overall.
According to China Central Television, China and Russia plan to deepen continuous strategic coordination-CCTV
China–Russia coordination headline suggests gradual geopolitical alignment; limited immediate effect on US risk assets, but could marginally affect energy/geopolitical risk premiums and trade uncertainty.
Vladimir Putin invited Chinese President Xi Jinping to travel to Russia next year.
Putin-Xi visit signals closer Russia–China ties, modest risk to energy/logistics and geopolitical risk premium; likely limited near-term without escalation.
According to Vladimir Putin, ties between Russia and China are supporting broader international stability.
Geopolitical tone is modestly stabilizing, but likely limited near-term effect on rates or earnings; benefits are more indirect via reduced risk premium vs. current energy/geopolitical channels.
Chinese President Xi Jinping told Vladimir Putin that China–Russia relations have reached their current level due to deepened political mutual trust and strategic cooperation, according to Xinhua.
Bolsters geopolitical alignment between China and Russia; modest risk premium for commodities/trade routes but no direct immediate hit to US growth given current range-bound tape.
Chinese President Xi Jinping told Vladimir Putin that China and Russia should promote the building of a more just and reasonable global governance system, according to Xinhua.
Headline signals continued China-Russia alignment on global governance; modest macro implications via geopolitics/trade risk, with limited immediate effect on rates or earnings.
CHINA COMMERCE MINISTRY says trade and investment bodies will provide stronger institutional safeguards for bilateral commerce
China signals supportive measures via trade and investment safeguards, mildly improving risk sentiment for global exporters and industrial demand; effect likely incremental amid still-fragile growth backdrop.
CHINA COMMERCE MINISTRY says U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods should not exceed the levels set under the Kuala Lumpur arrangement
China pushes back on U.S. tariffs, signaling trade-friction risk but likely limited incremental escalation versus existing tariff frameworks; modest negative for cyclical/global trade sentiment.
CHINA COMMERCE MINISTRY says Washington and Beijing are considering mutual tariff reductions covering at least $30 billion in goods each
Potential easing of US–China trade tensions via tariff reductions (at least $30B each) would support global trade volumes and risk assets; likely mild tailwind to cyclical exporters and China-linked supply chains while lowering inflation and uncertainty pressures.
CHINA COMMERCE MINISTRY says the two sides will jointly assess and address each other's justified concerns over rare earths
China signals coordinated assessment on rare-earth concerns, slightly easing supply-chain and geopolitics risk for electronics/advanced manufacturing supply chains, but details remain pending.
CHINA COMMERCE MINISTRY says both countries aim to extend the Kuala Lumpur trade framework
Signals continued China–ASEAN trade cooperation (less fragmentation risk), modestly supportive for EM Asia trade and industrial demand expectations; limited near-term effect given existing growth fragility.
CHINA COMMERCE MINISTRY says the United States will supply aircraft engines and component support tied to the Boeing agreement
China signaling continued access to Boeing-linked aircraft engine/component support reduces immediate aerospace trade/retaliation risk, modestly supportive for aviation supply-chain sentiment.
CHINA COMMERCE MINISTRY says China will dispatch a technical delegation to the U.S. regarding certain beef import suspensions
China-US beef import suspensions: limited, mostly trade/policy noise; marginal relief if talks progress, but broader growth/inflation impact likely minor.
The Chinese Commerce Ministry announces the resumption of poultry imports from certain U.S. states.
Normalization of US–China poultry trade should modestly ease agri/consumer input pressure and support specific food-chain names; broader equity impact likely limited given range-bound US markets.
The Chinese Commerce Ministry states that the United States will ensure supply of aircraft engine parts and related components to China.
Signals limited easing of US–China trade frictions for aircraft components; modestly supportive for industrial aerospace supply chains with minimal immediate macro effect.
China confirms it will acquire 200 Boeing planes, according to its Commerce Ministry.
China’s planned acquisition of ~200 Boeing aircraft is a modest positive read-through for aerospace demand and US industrial sentiment, but likely limited near-term market impact versus bigger drivers like real yields and oil.
Chinese state media says a meeting has begun between Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin.
Xi–Putin meeting headline adds mild geopolitical risk premium (risk-off can lift USD/defensive positioning), but no immediate policy/market detail yet.
RBC increases its target price for IG Group to 1,850p, up from 1,600p.
Positive analyst revision for IG Group; modestly bullish sentiment for online trading/brokerage and retail-investment platform names, likely limited macro impact versus rates/oil.
Chinese state media reports that Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin attended a welcome ceremony in Beijing.
Xi–Putin visit signals closer China-Russia ties, a mild macro/geopolitical risk premium for trade and sanctions-sensitive flows; limited immediate impact on US equities unless oil/energy sanctions escalate.
Samsung Electronics states that it is not clear if additional negotiations will occur before the strike begins.
Labor/union negotiation uncertainty at Samsung raises risk to semiconductor supply and regional tech sentiment, but effect is limited until a strike timing becomes clear.
Chinese state media reports that Vladimir Putin has reached the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
Diplomatic/geo-political headline with limited immediate fundamentals; minor risk premium for Europe/energy only.
South Korea’s labour authority says the parties could not bridge differences on two or three issues.
Labour dispute setback in South Korea raises localized risk for near-term production/industrial output, but the effect on global equities is likely limited unless it escalates into broader disruption or spreads to major exporters.
Samsung Electronics states that negotiations with the union broke down due to unresolved gaps on a few remaining issues.
Labor negotiations breakdown raises near-term margin/production risk for a major electronics supplier; modest negative for semicap supply-chain sentiment but likely limited systemic impact absent broader escalation.
South Korea’s labour authority says the collapse of Samsung-related talks is unfortunate.
Samsung-related labor negotiations/talks reportedly collapsed; modest negative read-through for tech supply-chain confidence and Korea-focused industrial/semiconductor sentiment, but not a direct macro catalyst.
Samsung Electronics expresses regret over the inability to reach an amicable settlement.
Samsung Electronics reportedly unable to reach an amicable settlement, raising idiosyncratic risk for memory/semiconductor supply-chain sentiment but limited direct macro read-through.
South Korea’s labour authority says it is willing to restart talks between Samsung and its union upon request from both sides.
Potential moderation of labor/industrial disruption risk for Samsung; mild support for Korean tech sentiment rather than a broad macro catalyst.
Samsung Electronics says it plans to address the dispute through negotiations with the union.
Samsung labor-dispute talks signal limited near-term operational risk; sentiment mildly mixed for Asia tech/manufacturing supply chains.
Samsung Electronics claims the union persisted with pay demands for a loss-making division that it deems unreasonable.
Labor/union dispute at Samsung could pressure margins and sentiment in semiconductors/consumer electronics, but impact is likely localized unless it spreads across Korea/contract manufacturers.
Samsung Electronics claims the union sought bonus payments that would not be acceptable in broader society.
Labor-dispute headline at Samsung Electronics; modest near-term read-through to Asian tech supply-chain sentiment, limited direct macro impact vs rates/oil.
Samsung Electronics states that meeting the union’s demands would have shaken its core principles.
Labor negotiations at Samsung raise modest risk to Asia tech supply-chain sentiment, but the statement suggests limited immediate operational disruption; likely minor impact unless it escalates or affects production schedules.
Russia reports that a drone was intercepted and downed in the Leningrad region, the governor said.
Localized drone incident raises geopolitical risk premium, mildly supportive for defense and risk-off hedging; limited direct macro effect unless it escalates or widens to supply routes/energy.
Japan has recorded a magnitude 6.2 earthquake in a preliminary assessment, says NIED.
Japan earthquake headline raises near-term risk to localized supply chains (auto/electronics) but market-wide effect likely limited unless damage escalates; FX/sovereign volatility possible if safety/perceived risk rises.
The Taiwan Affairs Office of China states that evolving US–China relations offer a path to handle disagreements over Taiwan more effectively.
Signals potential de-escalation in US–China ties around Taiwan, modestly easing geopolitical risk but not removing tail risk; could be slight support for tech supply-chain sentiment.
KOSPI declines 2.1% as Samsung pay talks fail to produce an agreement with the union.
Samsung union talks failing raises near-term risk for Korea’s consumer-tech supply chain and sentiment, with limited spillover unless labor action escalates.
China’s Taiwan Affairs Office says any political party in Taiwan can engage with it provided the one-China principle is upheld.
Managed political messaging from China to broaden engagement with Taiwan while reiterating the one-China constraint; headline risk for geopolitics is modest but could add volatility to semiconductors and regional risk premia.
The Samsung Electronics union states that it will pursue negotiations despite initiating a strike.
Labor action at a major component supplier raises near-term supply/production and cost risk; likely limited macro impact versus broader rates/oil drivers unless escalation disrupts chips/electronics supply.
China’s Taiwan Affairs Office says statements by Lai Ching-te cannot prevent what it describes as the motherland’s eventual reunification.
Escalating cross-strait rhetoric raises geopolitical risk and energy/defense premia; typically pressures risk assets and supports safe havens, with knock-on effects via USD/JPY and potential oil volatility.
The Samsung Electronics union states that mediation discussions have been brought to an end.
Labor dispute/mediation end at Samsung raises risks of renewed industrial actions, potentially disrupting electronics supply chains and adding uncertainty to electronics demand and margins.
Yonhap reports that negotiations between Samsung Electronics management and its South Korea union have been ended.
Labor negotiations ended at Samsung; potential near-term production/earnings uncertainty and margin risk, but largely Korea-specific and not a broad macro driver.
The Taiwan Affairs Office of China states that actions by the PLA serve as a strong warning to supporters of Taiwan independence.
Heightens cross-strait geopolitical risk, pressuring semiconductor supply-chain sentiment and keeping risk premia elevated; can also lift demand for safe havens versus cyclical assets.
Yonhap reports that the Samsung Electronics union in South Korea will proceed with a strike starting Thursday.
Samsung Electronics labor action risks near-term supply disruption in semiconductors/hardware, potentially adding to already-stretched supply chains and keeping tech-sensitive sentiment cautious.
Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te says the U.S. has made clear its intention to sustain relations with Taiwan.
Reaffirms US–Taiwan ties, modestly raising geopolitical premium; impacts semiconductors and risk-sensitive assets more than the broader market.
“OpenAI for Singapore” has been launched by OpenAI in partnership with the Ministry of Digital Development and Information, with a commitment exceeding S$300 million.
AI infrastructure/capex and government-backed adoption in Singapore support tech sentiment and potential demand for AI services/partners; likely mild positive for regional tech and semis, with limited direct near-term macro effect versus rate/oil drivers.
Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te notes that he has heard Donald Trump reaffirm that the U.S. position on Taiwan is unchanged.
Reaffirms current U.S. Taiwan stance, slightly reducing near-term geopolitical tail risk; sentiment modestly negative as ongoing cross-strait uncertainty remains a sensitivity for semiconductors and risk premia.
Alibaba Cloud, part of Alibaba Group, has launched its newest AI chip, the Zhenwu M890, for training and inference tasks.
Positive AI infrastructure/semiconductor read-through for regional cloud/AI capex; modest near-term uplift given it’s a single vendor launch amid range-bound, high-valuation markets.
According to China’s Taiwan Affairs Office, the U.S. understands Beijing’s position and does not support or accept Taiwan independence efforts.
Reinforces cross-strait geopolitical risk; potential risk premium for semis/defense and could pressure regional sentiment without a clear immediate macro policy change.
India faces LPG gap of 400,000 barrels a day as energy crisis goes on-NA
India’s LPG supply gap (≈400,000 bpd) adds to energy/commodity price volatility and raises near-term inflation risk, which can feed through to global gas/oil-linked costs and higher-discount-rate sensitivity.
Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te states he would tell Donald Trump that China is the key disruptor of regional security.
China–Taiwan rhetoric raises risk premium for semis supply chains and regional security, mildly negative for tech/industrial risk appetite; FX and oil sensitivity could tick up via geopolitics.
The Taiwan Affairs Office of China claims that Lai Ching-te has “sold out Taiwan without limits” and is acting against prevailing public sentiment.
China escalates rhetoric over Taiwan, increasing geopolitical risk premium; could pressure semiconductors and lift safe-haven demand.
20-year Japanese Government Bonds yield slips 5.5 basis points to 3.725%.
JPY rates slightly easing as JGB yields drift lower, a modest tailwind for duration-sensitive assets; FX sensitivity is limited but supportive for JPY vs higher-yielding currencies.
Taiwan President says cooperation with like-minded countries is aimed not at confrontation, but at safeguarding peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait and the Indo-Pacific regio
Reinforces ongoing geopolitical sensitivity around Taiwan Strait; modest risk premium for semiconductors supply-chain and defense/geo hedges, but not yet a direct escalation.
Taiwan President says increased defense investment reflects heightened awareness of threats and is intended to prevent war, not provoke it.
Rhetoric suggests sustained geopolitical risk around Taiwan; mildly bearish for risk sentiment and a tailwind for defense/strategic supply chains, but framed as deterrence rather than escalation.
Taiwan President says Taiwan seeks stability but will not sacrifice its sovereignty or democratic way of life.
Rhetoric around Taiwan sovereignty and democracy raises mild geopolitical risk premium, which can pressure risk assets modestly and keep energy/defense hedging demand elevated; FX and yields may react if tensions escalate.
Taiwan President says Taiwan is open to dialogue but will not accept being diminished.
Mixed geopolitical tone; openness to dialogue reduces immediate risk, but insistence on not being diminished keeps escalation risk elevated—typically a volatility/defense headline supportive for USD and downside for risk assets/semis tied to Taiwan supply chains.
Taiwan President says Taiwan cherishes peace but will not surrender freedom.
Geopolitical risk around Taiwan slightly elevates risk premia for semiconductors and raises caution in risk assets; FX/treasuries may see mild safe-haven flows.
Taiwan President says true peace can only be achieved through strength.
Geopolitical rhetoric around Taiwan raises risk premium for semiconductors and the broader Asia supply chain, likely pressuring risk assets and boosting defensive positioning (and possibly USD/JPY as a hedge).
Taiwan President says history shows that peace cannot rely only on goodwill, nor can it be built on concessions or illusions.
Heightened Taiwan/China geopolitical risk raises regional security premium, typically supporting defense/strategic assets while pressuring risk sentiment and raising uncertainty around supply chains; mild FX/volatility spillover likely.
Kihara states that he expects the Bank of Japan to work closely with the government and maintain appropriate monetary policy to meet its inflation objective.
BOJ alignment with government suggests continued focus on meeting inflation target with controlled policy stance; mild signal for yen and rate expectations rather than a near-term pivot.
According to Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Kihara, monetary policy is the responsibility of the Bank of Japan, in response to Bessent’s remarks on BoJ confidence.
Japan policy-remit clarification reduces immediate risk of policy-mix confusion, but keeps the focus on BoJ credibility and yen sensitivity.
The Taiwan Affairs Office of China claims that Lai Ching-te’s administration is acting against societal calls for peace and harming stability across the Taiwan Strait.
China’s Taiwan-related rhetoric raises geopolitical tail risk, which can pressure regional tech supply-chain confidence and lift safe-haven demand (typically supporting USD/JPY and hurting broader risk assets).
The Taiwan Affairs Office of China claims that Lai Ching-te is seeing a decline in public backing.
China-Taiwan political friction risks heightened geopolitical and semiconductor supply-chain concerns, adding risk premium to regional tech and defense-related assets.
China’s Taiwan Affairs Office says pursuit of Taiwan independence is fundamentally at odds with stability and peace across the Taiwan Strait.
Escalatory Taiwan rhetoric raises geopolitical risk premia for defense/semis supply-chain exposures, but broad market effect likely tempered unless accompanied by concrete action. FX and yields may react via risk-off and risk premium dynamics.
According to Taiwan’s President, consistent peaceful transitions of leadership show that Taiwan’s democracy is firmly established and irreversible.
Political reassurance on Taiwan leadership transition reduces near-term geopolitical tail risk, modestly supportive for risk sentiment and electronics supply-chain expectations, but does not remove broader cross-strait risks.
Japan plans island drone deployment to monitor Chinese naval activity-SCMP
Japan-China naval/drone monitoring headline raises regional tensions modestly; likely feeds a small risk premium in regional geopolitics without clear immediate spillover to global growth or rates.
China has set aside 30 million yuan from central funds to assist flood-hit Guizhou, according to the state planner.
Modest, localized China fiscal support for flood relief; limited direct spillover to global demand, mostly a neutral-to-slightly supportive read-through for domestic activity and commodities.
20-year Japanese Government Bonds yield slips 3 basis points to 3.750%.
Lower JGB yields suggest easing rate pressure in Japan, mildly supportive for global risk sentiment and rate-sensitive assets; modest near-term tailwind for yen- and duration-sensitive markets.
30-year Japanese Government Bonds yield slips 3 basis points to 3.750%.
Lower JGB yields suggest easing pressure on Japanese rates, slightly supportive for rate-sensitive risk assets; limited direct impact unless it shifts broader real-yield and USD pricing.
10-year Japanese Government Bonds yield declines 1 basis point, reaching 2.790%.
JPY rates eased modestly as 10Y JGB yields fell ~1 bp to 2.79%, slightly supportive for global duration/financial conditions; limited near-term signal amid higher-for-longer US real yields.
SkyeChip makes Bursa debut as Malaysia bets on chip design-NA
Malaysia chip-design market debut is modestly positive for regional semiconductors/tech investment sentiment, but unlikely to move broader global equities in a single headline.
GOOGLE CEO SUNDAR PICHAI SAYS THE NEXT 5 YEARS COULD CREATE MASSIVE WEALTH: According to Pichai, AI is driving the biggest technology shift since the internet — and 2026–2030 may be the window where individuals can still build, invest, and scale before the market becomes
AI/tech optimism supports high-multiple growth, but broader market remains sensitive to real yields and valuation risk.
AMERICANS ARE DROWNING IN RECORD DEBT: US household debt rose by $18 billion in Q1 2026 to a record $18.8 trillion. Mortgage debt hit an all-time high of $13.2 trillion after rising $21 billion. Auto loan debt surged to a record $1.7 trillion, up $18 billion.
Record household leverage raises sensitivity to higher rates and weakening consumer demand, mildly bearish for discretionary and credit-cycle assets.
Google is increasing its AI presence in Singapore through a national partnership with the government.
Supportive for AI capex/cloud demand; likely modest positive read-through for AI infrastructure and hyperscaler spending, with limited immediate macro impact.
China’s Chinese yuan starts the session at 6.8140 against the dollar versus a prior close of 6.8122.
CNY opens slightly firmer vs USD; modest signal for EM FX sentiment but limited macro/earnings implication by itself.
40-year Japanese Government Bonds yield slips 5 basis points to 4.345%.
JPY rates softer: a drop in Japan’s 40Y yield suggests lower expected inflation/term premium, mildly supportive for global duration/financial conditions; limited direct impact versus the dominant US real-yield and Fed path.
The government of Japan is issuing 0.7 trillion yen in 20-year Japanese Government Bonds at a 3.400% coupon rate.
Long-end JGB supply with a ~3.40% coupon can modestly pressure Japanese yields/JPY via term-premium dynamics, affecting rate-sensitive sectors and global risk appetite at the margin.
US to cut troops in Europe to lowest level since before Ukraine invasion-FT
Lower US troop levels in Europe may raise geopolitical risk perceptions, but near-term effects are likely limited unless linked to escalation; macro channel mainly through risk premium and potential oil volatility.
The 5-year Japanese Government Bonds yield hits 2.040%, reaching an all-time high.
A fresh all-time high in Japanese yields signals a rise in global real-rate pressure, likely weighing on duration-sensitive assets and tightening financial conditions via higher sovereign yields.
5-year Japanese Government Bonds yield edges higher by 1.5 basis points to 2.040%.
Japanese yields drifting higher implies firmer rates/liquidity tightening expectations, mildly pressuring global duration-sensitive assets and yen demand dynamics.
2-year Japanese Government Bonds yield edges up 1 basis point, reaching 1.450%.
Slight rise in JGB yields hints at firmer Japanese rates/real-yield pressure, mildly negative for duration-sensitive assets; supports a stronger/less-weak JPY backdrop versus USD.
China’s People's Bank of China fixed the yuan reference rate at 6.8397, compared with the prior close of 6.8122.
PBoC fixed a stronger CNY reference rate vs prior close, suggesting tighter/less dovish FX support; near-term could modestly pressure USD-sensitive exporters and slightly ease imported inflation expectations.
U.S. COMMODITIES REGULATOR REVIEWING OIL TRADES MADE BEFORE PRESIDENT TRUMP’S SOCIAL MEDIA POST: WSJ
Potential regulatory scrutiny of oil trades could add near-term uncertainty to crude pricing and energy-risk premia, but likely limited macro spillover unless it escalates into supply/market disruptions.
UAE says drone that hit near its nuclear plant was launched from Iraq -RTRS
Geopolitical risk at critical infrastructure (nuclear plant) raises Middle East tensions, which can spill into risk premia and energy volatility (oil) but is not directly linked to global growth or Fed policy.
Mitsui & Co announces an investment in Armada, a U.S.-based company focused on AI infrastructure for industrial sites.
Positive AI-infrastructure news for industrial AI capex; supports selective growth/technology sentiment but is likely modest at market level.
Wage talks between Samsung Electronics and its South Korea union have resumed ahead of a strike deadline, according to a Reuters witness.
Samsung wage talks restarting reduces near-term strike risk for South Korea’s largest tech exporter; limited direct macro effect unless labor action escalates.
WSJ reports that the CFTC is focusing on at least three firms in its investigation into unusually high oil futures trading activity.
CFTC scrutiny of unusually high oil futures positioning raises near-term uncertainty in crude risk premia and could nudge energy trading volatility.
U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is scrutinizing a surge in oil futures trading that occurred moments before President Donald Trump postponed planned strikes on Tehran in March, according to the Wall Street Journal.
CFTC scrutiny of oil futures surge linked to Middle East strike timing raises uncertainty around crude risk pricing; likely pressures energy risk premia near-term and keeps oil volatility elevated.
The Taiwan overnight interbank rate starts the session at 0.805%, flat versus the prior open.
Taiwan rates steady/flat in the overnight interbank market; minimal near-term signal for global liquidity or risk appetite.
CHINA (MAY) 1-YEAR LOAN PRIME RATE ACTUAL: 3% VS 3% PREVIOUS;EST 3%
China 1-year LPR held steady at 3%, suggesting stable easing stance; mildly bearish for cyclicals if demand support is limited.
CHINA (MAY) 5-YEAR LOAN PRIME RATE ACTUAL: 3.50% VS 3.50% PREVIOUS;EST 3.50%
China’s 5-year LPR (loan prime rate) held at 3.50%, signaling stable—though not easing—support for credit; modestly limits downside for China-linked demand and EM risk appetite.
Axios reports that Donald Trump’s AI executive order aims to give the government early access to cutting-edge AI models.
Slightly bullish for US AI/tech as government access could accelerate model deployment and adoption, but policy uncertainty caps upside.
Two supertankers loaded with about 4 million barrels of crude oil have left the Strait of Hormuz, data indicates.
Oil logistics easing slightly after Hormuz risk; supports near-term energy supply expectations but remains headline-sensitive given Middle East geopolitics.
HSBC chief executive emphasizes the need for staff to embrace the AI transformation rather than push back against it.
Supports the AI adoption narrative for financial services/IT spend; modest positive sentiment but limited immediate macro impact unless it accelerates profitability or cost takeout.
MORGAN STANLEY ISSUES CHINA-ONLY IPHONES TO ITS HONG KONG BANKERS-FT
China-specific iPhone distribution shift highlights uneven demand/supply dynamics in China and could modestly weigh on China exposure and consumer tech sentiment; limited direct US-market signal.
TRUMP’S ‘WORST’ REPUBLICAN CRITIC LOSES MOST EXPENSIVE HOUSE PRIMARY EVER-FT
Political headline adds mild uncertainty to US policy trajectory, but it’s a local primary event with limited immediate macro/market transmission.