Skip to content
BREAKING Read more

Push Notifications

Get notified when new briefings drop and when breaking news hits — even when the site isn't open.

Saved Stories

Keyboard Shortcuts

Previous day ←
Next day →
Open bookmarks B
Toggle dark mode D
Close / dismiss Esc
Subscribe S
Show shortcuts ?

The Daily Brief

Today's Briefing Live Updates
Last refreshed: loading...
FTSE 100 --
S&P 500 --
Brent Crude --
GBP/USD --
Gold --
EUR/GBP --
UK 10Y Gilt --
VIX --
Bitcoin --
US 10Y --
(vs. prev. close)
✎ Curated Briefing · Edited at 08:00 & 18:00
☼

Morning Briefing

Thursday 7 May 2026 — 08:30 BST

What It Means For You

  • Polling stations are now open. Doors close at 22:00 across England, Wales and Scotland. Photo ID is required at the desk; postal ballots must be hand-delivered by 22:00. Met Office forecasts showers across most of England through the day — an umbrella matters more than usual because turnout dips on wet days hurt the incumbent.
  • President Trump paused ‘Project Freedom’ in the Strait of Hormuz overnight as Iran reviews the one-page memo to end the 68-day war. The proposal would lift competing blockades, freeze uranium enrichment for 12 years and unfreeze billions in Iranian assets. Brent has held around $103 in early Asian trade; if the memo is signed, expect a further leg lower in oil and a knock-on easing in pump prices over 7–10 days.
  • UK markets open with the FTSE 100 indicated +0.2% at 8,388 on light volume after yesterday’s 2% rally. Ten-year gilts traded at 4.90% in Asian hours, the lowest level in three weeks, and sterling is firm at $1.3022. The big risk is the result, not the open: a strong Reform showing tonight could retrace the gilt rally on Friday morning when London desks reprice the political backdrop.

Iran War — Day 68. The war started 28 February 2026. Trump paused Project Freedom on Tuesday evening as Iran reviews the one-page memo; the text would end hostilities, lift the competing Hormuz blockades, freeze enrichment for 12 years (down from 20 in the prior US position) and release frozen Iranian assets. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is reportedly the second mediator alongside Pakistan’s Sharif. Iran’s foreign-ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said Tehran will channel its formal response via Islamabad. Brent settled at $102.95 yesterday; FTSE closed at 8,374.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump Pauses ‘Project Freedom’ in Hormuz as Memo Nears

President Trump suspended the Strait of Hormuz naval mission overnight, citing “great progress” on the one-page memo with Tehran. CNN reports Washington and Tehran are “closing in” on a 14-point text that would end hostilities, lift competing blockades and trigger a 30-day window to settle nuclear, sanctions and strait-access terms. Trump said the war would be “over quickly”; Iran’s foreign ministry confirmed the proposal is under formal review.

Dive deeper
Pausing the Hormuz operation is the most concrete US de-escalation gesture of the war and signals Washington genuinely expects a memo to be signed within days rather than weeks. The pause also defuses Iran’s strongest casus belli: any US-Iran shoot-out in the strait while the memo is on the table would have collapsed the diplomatic track. The 14-point structure is unusual — it permits both leaders to claim victory simultaneously, which is the diplomatic prerequisite for any deal Trump signs. Tehran’s formal response is expected within 24–48 hours via the Pakistani channel.

Memo Drops Uranium Moratorium to 12 Years; Frozen Assets to Be Released

The text under review would freeze Iranian uranium enrichment for at least 12 years, down from a previous US ask of 20, and lift sanctions in exchange for the unfreezing of billions of dollars in Iranian assets held abroad. Iran would also formally agree not to develop a nuclear weapon. Both sides would simultaneously reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping. Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is now publicly named alongside Pakistan’s Sharif as a mediator who pushed for the pause.

Dive deeper
A 12-year moratorium is meaningfully shorter than 20 but politically defensible in Washington because it covers two presidential terms beyond a possible Trump second term. The asset-release figure has not been disclosed; it is likely larger than the $6 billion South Korean tranche unfrozen in 2023, given accumulated proceeds frozen since the 2024 sanctions regime. The Saudi role is the more important diplomatic development: Riyadh has been quietly aligned with the Pakistani mediation throughout but was not publicly disclosed until Tuesday’s pause. The IAEA verification mechanism remains the open question and the most likely point of breakdown.

Russia Launches 100+ Drones at Ukraine Hours After Declaring Victory Day Truce

Russia attacked eastern and southern Ukraine with more than 100 attack drones overnight, hours after declaring a unilateral 8–9 May ceasefire timed for Friday’s Victory Day parade. Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said the Kremlin “broke its own truce within hours of declaring it”. Ukrainian long-range drones struck Cheboksary on the Volga, killing two; earlier strikes on a Naftogaz facility had killed five. The Kremlin confirmed the Red Square parade will proceed without tanks for the first time in nearly two decades.

Dive deeper
Russia’s declared truce was always conditional on Ukraine reciprocating; the overnight barrage gives the Kremlin a propaganda line while preserving operational tempo into Friday. The Cheboksary strike is Ukraine’s deepest of the year and signals Kyiv has chosen to demonstrate reach rather than restraint ahead of the parade. Stripping tanks from the parade reflects equipment shortages and air-defence concerns combined: drones have repeatedly entered Moscow oblast in recent weeks. Belarusian and North Korean leaders remain confirmed; most Western and African delegations have withdrawn or downgraded.

Saudi Arabia Joins Pakistan as Named Mediator on Iran Memo

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday named Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman as the second mediator who pushed Trump to pause the Hormuz mission. The disclosure ends weeks of public speculation about Riyadh’s role. Pakistan said it was “very hopeful that the current momentum will lead to a lasting agreement”. Iran’s foreign-ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei confirmed Tehran will channel its formal response via Islamabad rather than direct US contact.

Dive deeper
A Saudi-Pakistani mediation axis is the diplomatic substrate that produced the previous regional truce in 2023 and is the most credible channel available given the absence of European leverage in this conflict. Riyadh’s public emergence aligns with its broader 2024–26 strategy of presenting itself as the indispensable Gulf actor; signing the memo as a co-mediator would lock in that position. Tehran’s preference for indirect channels reflects domestic political constraints — direct US-Iran contact remains a third-rail issue for the IRGC and conservative blocs. Expect a Saudi-hosted signing ceremony if the memo is finalised.

Brent Holds at $103 in Asian Hours; Memo Probability Priced at ~60%

Brent crude traded at $103.45 in Asian hours on Thursday, broadly stable after Wednesday’s 6% collapse. WTI was at $98.30. Asian equities were mixed, with the Nikkei up 0.4% and Hang Seng up 0.3%. Implied options markets put the probability of a memo being signed within ten days at around 60%, derived from the recent decline in oil-market volatility and the price action since Wednesday. Gold pulled back to $4,810 from its mid-week record.

Dive deeper
A flat overnight tape after a 6% one-day move suggests the market has digested Wednesday’s rally rather than positioning for an extension. The 60% memo-probability priced in options is the cleanest read on what professional money expects: signing within ten days is the central case but failure scenarios remain materially priced. The implied risk asymmetry is meaningful: a memo signing pulls Brent towards $90 quickly, while a breakdown returns it above $115 within a session. London opens into a relatively benign tape but UK assets carry an additional political risk premium for tonight.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Polling Stations Open Across England, Wales and Scotland

Polling stations opened at 07:00 BST across the three nations and will close at 22:00. Voters need photo ID at the desk; postal ballots must be hand-delivered to a polling station by 22:00. Roughly 5,000 council seats in England are contested alongside the full Scottish Parliament and Senedd. Almost 25,000 candidates are standing. Sir Keir Starmer voted in north London shortly after 07:30; Sir Ed Davey voted in Kingston; Kemi Badenoch in North West Essex.

Dive deeper
Photo-ID enforcement remains the operational risk — Electoral Commission research from 2024 estimated 4% of would-be voters were turned away on first attempt; the proportion is materially higher among younger and lower-income voters who lean Labour. Postal-ballot logistics are tight today: many councils received bank-holiday-disrupted deliveries on Tuesday and the hand-delivery deadline is being underplayed in broadcast coverage. Turnout in local elections typically tops out at 30–38%; below 30% historically benefits Reform, the Greens and the Conservatives at Labour’s expense.

Final YouGov — Reform 27%, Conservatives 21%, Labour 19%, Greens 13%

The final YouGov tracker published overnight puts Reform UK on 27% (unchanged), Conservatives on 21% (+1), Labour on 19% (unchanged) and the Greens on 13% (-1). Reform leads in the West Midlands MRP in all 13 council areas and is on course to top the poll across Wales. London MRP shows Labour holding 15 of 32 boroughs, down from 21. Bloomberg’s expert panel reaffirmed its central forecast of 1,850 Labour council seat losses.

Dive deeper
A 19% Labour share applied to today’s arithmetic still produces catastrophic seat losses because the party is defending a 2022 mid-cycle peak. The Conservative recovery to 21% is the most surprising late move and will dilute Reform’s seat count in shire England, although not its vote share. The Green 13% is structural rather than transient: the party is now polling above Labour in two London boroughs and across university constituencies. The cleanest test of the night is Sunderland: a Reform win there ends Labour’s post-1973 monopoly on the council and triggers the leadership challenge contingencies.

Cabinet Readying Friday Leadership Challenge Contingency

Cabinet sources told Bloomberg overnight that contingency planning for a Friday-morning leadership challenge against Sir Keir Starmer is in place. The PLP’s 20% nomination threshold — about 80 MPs — is comfortably reachable given current Cabinet-level discontent. Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner remain the principal succession candidates after Andy Burnham’s exclusion on parliamentary-seat grounds. Whip soundings are reportedly already circulating among 2024-intake MPs in marginal seats.

Dive deeper
A formal challenge requires the support of 20% of the parliamentary party — comfortably within reach — but a successful leadership change requires a candidate who can unite the cabinet faction and the union-backed left simultaneously. Streeting controls the parliamentary numbers; Rayner controls the membership. The compromise candidate scenarios remain politically thin: most plausible names sit in the Lords or hold marginal seats. The bigger structural problem is that any new leader inherits the same Brent oil shock, the same fiscal arithmetic and the same Reform polling lead — no leadership change resolves the substantive crisis.

Met Office: Showers Across Most of England; Polling-Day Turnout at Risk

The Met Office forecasts showers across most of England through the day with periods of heavier rain in the Midlands and the South East. Scotland and parts of Wales are forecast drier. Wet polling days typically reduce turnout by 2–4 percentage points. Lower turnout disproportionately hurts incumbents whose voters are less motivated, although Labour’s ground operation will work hardest in Sunderland, Wakefield and Barnsley to mitigate the effect.

Dive deeper
Reform’s base is anger-driven and therefore relatively weather-insensitive; Labour’s incumbent coalition is enthusiasm-driven and demonstrably weather-sensitive. The cumulative effect of the weather plus the Mandelson scandal plus the £310-per-car fuel premium since February is the single most adverse turnout backdrop a sitting government has faced in a UK national vote in modern times. Postal voting, where Labour has historically dominated, may be the saving variable; postal turnout typically runs at 75–80% versus 30–35% in person.

Markets Open Quietly Ahead of 22:00 Polls Close

The FTSE 100 opened up 0.2% at 8,388 in light early trading, building modestly on Wednesday’s 2% rally. Ten-year gilts pulled back to 4.90% in Asian hours, the lowest in three weeks, and sterling firmed to $1.3022. Volumes are expected to thin through the day as desks square positions ahead of the result. The genuine market event is Friday morning’s reaction to whatever Sunderland and the West Midlands produce overnight. The implied move on the FTSE is around 1.5%.

Dive deeper
A quiet pre-result session is normal but the underlying setup is unusual: London is exposed to two simultaneous binary events — the Iran memo signing and the election result — either of which can move the FTSE 1.5% in a single session. Pension-fund LDI hedging activity is reportedly elevated through Thursday, indicating institutions are neutralising rather than betting. The cleanest forward read remains the gilt curve: it has already priced a partial Iran de-escalation but has not priced any further fiscal shock from a leadership change. Friday will resolve which dominates.
One To Read

‘Starmer’s Referendum’: How Local Elections Could Expose a Fractured UK

Al Jazeera · A clear-eyed pre-vote framing of why tonight’s elections function as a verdict on Starmer’s premiership rather than a routine local poll. Walks through the structural drivers of the four-party split, what Reform’s 67-council projection actually means in seat-count terms, and the leadership-challenge mechanics that activate from Friday morning.
☽

Evening Briefing

Wednesday 6 May 2026 — 17:55 BST

What It Means For You

  • Brent’s 6% fall to $103 should slow further pump-price rises, but the 175p unleaded ceiling reached this week is unlikely to retrace materially for at least 7–10 days. Expect a plateau rather than meaningful relief at the forecourt; diesel margins remain compressed at independent stations.
  • Polling stations open at 07:00 and close at 22:00 tomorrow across England, Wales and Scotland. Photo ID is required; postal ballots must be hand-delivered to a polling station by 22:00. Met Office forecasts showers across most of England, so allow extra time and consider going early.
  • The FTSE 100 closed up 2% at 8,374, sterling firmed to $1.3015 and ten-year gilts eased through 5% to 4.92%. Pension scheme members in LDI-linked strategies should see a calmer Thursday open; market-implied odds of a Bank of England cut on 18 June have ticked up modestly with the lower oil price.

Iran War — Day 67. The war started 28 February 2026. Pakistani mediators briefed the White House Tuesday that Iran is “moving toward compromise” on a one-page memo to end the war. The text would declare hostilities ended and open a 30-day window on Hormuz, sanctions and a 10-year-plus uranium-enrichment moratorium; Tehran has not formally responded. Trump warned the US would bomb “at a much higher level and intensity” if Iran refuses. Brent crashed 6% to $102.95; FTSE rallied 2% to 8,374; VIX fell to 28.5. Russia broke its own 8–9 May Victory Day truce overnight with 100+ drones into Ukraine.

GEO Geopolitical

US-Iran Memo Edges Toward Conclusion as Pakistani Mediators Brief White House

Pakistani intermediaries briefed the White House on Tuesday that Iran is “moving toward compromise” on a one-page memo to end the 67-day war, with Washington expecting a formal Iranian response within 48 hours. The text would declare hostilities ended and trigger a 30-day window to resolve nuclear restrictions, Strait of Hormuz access and sanctions relief. The proposal includes a uranium-enrichment moratorium of more than ten years and the removal of Iran’s highly enriched stockpile.

Dive deeper
A one-page memo is a structurally different instrument from a comprehensive ceasefire treaty: it allows both sides to claim a political victory without committing to verifiable timelines. The 30-day negotiation window is the critical clause — it locks in a window during which neither side can resume kinetic action without bearing the diplomatic cost. The Hormuz language is reportedly the hardest sticking point: Tehran wants formal recognition that no foreign navy may interdict Iranian-flagged vessels, while Washington insists on freedom of navigation. The uranium-removal provision, if signed, would reverse the entire post-2018 trajectory of Iran’s nuclear programme.
↻ Tuesday: “exchanging messages via Pakistan” → Wednesday: White House expects Iranian response on the memo within 48 hours.

Brent Crashes 6% to $102.95 as Diplomatic Breakthrough Reprices War Premium

Brent crude fell almost 6% to settle at $102.95 a barrel on Wednesday, its sharpest single-session decline since the war began, as traders priced rising odds of a memo settlement. The move unwound four sessions of risk premium accumulated since Monday’s UAE strike. WTI fell to $98 a barrel; gasoline cracks weakened in line. The VIX dropped to 28.5, its lowest reading in four weeks, and gold gave back $57 to $4,818.

Dive deeper
A 6% single-day fall on diplomatic progress is a textbook risk-premium unwind, but the speed reveals how thin the bid had become. Producers are unhedged for sustained sub-$100 Brent: OPEC+ compliance has been weakening through April, and any genuine ceasefire risks triggering a price war on top of the diplomatic one. The VIX move signals derivatives desks are dismantling the stagflation hedges built up since Monday. Traders will watch the next 48 hours of Tehran’s formal response closely; failure of the memo would likely retrace the entire week’s move within a single session.
↻ Yesterday close: Brent $109.50, VIX 34.0 → Today close: Brent $102.95 (−6%), VIX 28.5 (−16%).

Trump Threatens Bombing at “Much Higher Level” if Iran Refuses Deal

President Trump warned on Wednesday that the United States would resume strikes “at a much higher level and intensity” than before the April ceasefire if Tehran did not sign the memo. The threat came as the President said negotiations were simultaneously making “great progress” via Islamabad. He told reporters direct US-Iran talks remained premature. The dual messaging is deliberate: maximum pressure in public while back-channel diplomacy proceeds in private.

Dive deeper
Trump’s “higher level” framing is calibrated to harden the floor under the negotiation rather than to telegraph imminent action. The deliberate refusal to authorise direct talks preserves Pakistani leverage as the sole channel and prevents Tehran from elevating the dialogue prematurely. The pattern matches the President’s familiar oscillation between threat and inducement, with the threat re-anchoring expectations every 24–48 hours. Markets read the dual signal cleanly today — Brent fell 6% on the “great progress” line rather than rising on the bombing threat — suggesting the diplomatic track is now seen as primary.

Russia Launches 100+ Drones at Ukraine Hours After Declaring Victory Day Truce

Russia attacked eastern and southern Ukraine with more than 100 attack drones overnight, hours after declaring a unilateral 8–9 May ceasefire to coincide with Victory Day commemorations in Moscow. Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said the Kremlin “broke the truce within hours of declaring it”. Ukrainian long-range drones struck Cheboksary on the Volga, killing two. Earlier strikes on a Naftogaz gas facility had killed five.

Dive deeper
Russia’s declared Victory Day truce was always conditional on Ukraine reciprocating; the overnight barrage allows the Kremlin to claim Kyiv refused while preserving operational tempo. The 100-drone scale is consistent with the Shahed launch rate Russia has sustained since March, suggesting no diversion of stocks ahead of Friday’s parade. The Cheboksary strike, hundreds of miles from the front, is Ukraine’s deepest attack of the year and signals continuing willingness to hold deep-strike capacity in reserve. Russian combat losses have now passed 1.34 million personnel since February 2022.

Moscow Strips Tanks from Victory Day Parade for First Time in Decades

The Kremlin confirmed on Wednesday that Friday’s Red Square parade will proceed without tanks, intercontinental missile systems or most heavy hardware — the smallest turnout in nearly two decades. President Zelensky called the decision “a sign of weakness”, saying Moscow “fears drones may buzz over Red Square”. Foreign delegations have been cut back; Belarusian and North Korean leaders remain confirmed. The Kremlin cites “security considerations”.

Dive deeper
Stripping armour from the Victory Day parade is an unmistakable signal of equipment shortages, however the Kremlin chooses to frame it. The 2024 parade already displayed only a single T-34 tank; the 2026 absence completes the trajectory. Air-defence concerns are real: Ukrainian deep-strike drones have repeatedly entered Moscow oblast over the past month. The decision also reflects domestic political calculation — a smaller parade limits televised images of war casualties returning to families ahead of regional governor appointments scheduled for late May. Putin’s speech is the substantive event to watch.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Polls Open in 14 Hours — Starmer Faces His “Referendum”

Voters across England, Wales and Scotland go to the polls in 14 hours in elections framed by all major parties as a verdict on Sir Keir Starmer’s premiership. Polling stations open at 07:00 Thursday and close at 22:00. Senedd, Holyrood and roughly 5,000 English council seats are contested simultaneously. The final YouGov tracker puts Reform on 27%, the Conservatives on 21%, Labour on 19% and the Greens on 13%.

Dive deeper
A 19% Labour share would be the worst going into a UK national vote since 1918 by some measures. The four-party split fundamentally changes the seat-count maths: a 19% national vote share converts to wildly different council outcomes depending on the exact distribution between Reform and the Greens. Cabinet contingency planning for a Friday-morning leadership challenge is reportedly in place; whip soundings are circulating. The PLP’s 20% nomination threshold — around 80 MPs — is a number any plausible challenger can clear given current Cabinet-level discontent.

FTSE 100 Closes Up 2% at 8,374 on Iran Diplomatic Breakthrough

London’s FTSE 100 closed 2% higher at 8,374 on Wednesday as the Brent collapse drove a sharp risk-on rotation across European bourses. Sterling firmed to $1.3015; ten-year gilt yields eased back through 5% to 4.92%, the largest single-session fall in three weeks. The move offsets most of Monday’s election-week volatility, although the Treasury’s fiscal arithmetic still does not hold at the year-to-date Brent average. UK miners and oils led the gains.

Dive deeper
Gilts moving back through 5% gives the Treasury slightly more room to defend the autumn Budget timetable, but the relief is conditional on the memo actually being signed. Sterling’s recovery to $1.3015 reflects dollar weakness as much as UK strength: the Iran de-escalation premium is a global trade. The bond market’s 14-basis-point rally suggests the buy-side is pricing perhaps a 50% probability of a memo being signed within ten days. A Reform breakthrough on Thursday night would partially retrace the gilt rally; a Labour-hold scenario would extend it.
↻ Morning: FTSE 8,210, Gilt 5.06 → Close: FTSE 8,374 (+2%), Gilt 4.92 (−14bps).

Bloomberg Reaffirms 1,850 Labour Council Seat Loss Forecast

Bloomberg’s expert election panel reaffirmed its central forecast on Wednesday afternoon: Labour will lose 1,850 council seats Thursday night, the worst single-night loss for any incumbent governing party in modern records. Cabinet sources accept 2,000 as the realistic ceiling. Reform UK is projected to take outright control of Sunderland, Thurrock, Wakefield and Barnsley from Labour, alongside Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk from the Conservatives. The Greens are projected to gain 555 seats.

Dive deeper
The 1,850 figure has held steady through three days of polling movement, suggesting forecasters have settled on a central case. Reform’s projected sweep of four Labour heartland councils is the more politically explosive detail: Sunderland and Wakefield are post-war Labour fixtures whose loss reframes the party’s northern coalition entirely. The Greens taking 555 seats from a base of 141 confirms the four-party fracture is real on the ground rather than purely a polling artefact. The combined Labour-Conservative seat share would fall below 60% for the first time in any nationwide UK vote.

Reform Tops YouGov Final MRP in Every West Midlands Council

YouGov’s final pre-election MRP, published Wednesday morning, projects Reform UK leading the poll in all 13 West Midlands council areas, including 45% in Cannock Chase and 43% in Nuneaton and Tamworth. Regional vote share stands at 30%; nationally Reform polls 27% to Labour’s 12%. London projections show Reform ahead in three boroughs for the first time. Nigel Farage held his final retail rally in Cannock Chase late Wednesday afternoon.

Dive deeper
Cannock Chase voted Brexit, swung to Boris Johnson in 2019 and to Labour in 2024 — a 45% Reform projection there is the cleanest indicator of the realignment’s scale. The London boroughs are the more politically significant signal: Reform topping any London council was unthinkable in 2024, and projections now show three. The 12% national Labour share would be the worst Labour performance in any nationwide vote since 1918. Farage’s decision to close in Cannock rather than Clacton signals confidence in West Midlands organisation rather than the South-East coast.

Reeves’s Fiscal Buffer Partially Restored as Brent Falls Through $103

The Brent collapse to $102.95 has partially restored Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s eroded fiscal headroom, although Treasury officials cautioned the year-to-date average remains above the OBR’s March central forecast of $82. The fall takes the implied annual UK fuel-import bill back below the level priced into the Spring Statement. Markets ticked up the implied probability of a Bank of England cut at the 18 June meeting; the MPC held at 3.75% on 30 April with one member voting for a rise.

Dive deeper
A single day’s oil move does not restore Reeves’s £9.9 billion buffer in any meaningful sense, but it does change the immediate political optics: the autumn Budget arithmetic is no longer mathematically broken at current Brent. The Bank of England’s April scenario analysis foresaw inflation peaking at 6.2% under prolonged conflict; the milder scenario peaks at 3.6% by year-end, and today’s move pushes the path closer to the latter. CPI stood at 3.3% in March. The 18 June MPC decision is now genuinely live again rather than a foregone conclusion.
One To Read

Local Elections Could Hasten the Exit of Britain’s Embattled Prime Minister

The Washington Post · A measured outsider’s account of how a single Thursday-night seat count could trigger the most consequential parliamentary leadership reckoning in a decade. Maps the structural pressures — Reform’s rise, the Greens’ northern advance, fuel-price politics, the Mandelson fallout — that have collapsed Starmer’s coalition, and surveys the candidate plumbing already in place behind the scenes.
☼

Morning Briefing

Wednesday 6 May 2026 — 12:38 BST

What It Means For You

  • Brent has eased to $109.50 from Monday’s $114 spike, but pump prices are still catching up. Petrol is expected to push 175p and diesel above 205p this week. The cumulative additional fuel cost since 28 February now exceeds £265 per car for the average UK household.
  • Polls open tomorrow at 07:00 across England, the Welsh Senedd and the Scottish Parliament. Photo ID is required: check accepted forms before leaving home, and confirm your polling station on your card. Postal vote returns must reach the local returning officer by 10pm Thursday or be hand-delivered to a polling station.
  • Ten-year gilt yields traded above 5% this morning and Bitcoin broke $80,000 overnight; the FTSE has drifted to 8,210. Pension scheme members in defined-benefit or LDI-linked schemes may wish to check their gilt exposure given the third consecutive session of double-digit basis-point swings.

Iran War — Day 67. The war started 28 February 2026. UAE intercepts second wave of Iran-attributed missiles and drones overnight; IRGC publicly denies responsibility. US says “offensive phase” over but rejects any Iranian control of the Strait of Hormuz; Trump warns Iran would be “blown off the face of the earth” if US vessels are targeted. Brent eases to $109.50 after Monday’s $114 spike. Russia broke Ukraine’s unilateral truce overnight with 108 drones and three missiles; 27 killed in earlier strikes including five at a Naftogaz gas facility. Polls open tomorrow at 07:00. Gilts trade through 5%.

GEO Geopolitical

UAE Intercepts Second Wave of Iran-Attributed Missiles and Drones

The United Arab Emirates said its air defences intercepted further ballistic and cruise missiles overnight, the second consecutive day of strikes attributed to Iran. The Foreign Ministry called the attacks “treacherous aggression”. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps publicly denied responsibility late Tuesday, deepening uncertainty over Tehran’s chain of command. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bahrain remain on heightened air-defence alert.

Dive deeper
The IRGC denial complicates the diplomatic response: if Tehran cannot or will not own the strikes, Gulf states have no clear interlocutor for de-escalation. The pattern — ballistic and cruise missiles intercepted offshore, drones reaching the Fujairah energy complex — suggests two distinct platforms operating in tandem rather than a single rogue unit. The UAE has now requested expanded US Patriot and THAAD coverage, and Bahrain is considering a similar request. The Gulf Cooperation Council, the European Union and Jordan have all condemned the attacks, but coordinated retaliation remains off the table while Washington insists the “offensive phase” is complete.

US Declares “Offensive Phase” Over but Rejects Tehran Control of Hormuz

Senior US officials told reporters Tuesday evening that the offensive phase of the war is over, but cautioned the United States will not permit Tehran to dictate access to the Strait of Hormuz. President Trump warned Iran would be “blown off the face of the earth” if its forces target US vessels in the strait, and said Iran “better hope” the current ceasefire holds. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi insisted there is “no military solution to a political crisis”.

Dive deeper
The two statements set incompatible terms. Washington wants a return to pre-war freedom of navigation without conceding any leverage on the nuclear file; Tehran wants any guarantee of access to come with formal recognition of its strategic position in the Gulf. The semantic distinction between an “offensive phase” ending and the war ending is doing significant work: it allows the administration to claim a win without giving up the option of further strikes. Markets read this as a structural standoff rather than a near-term resolution, and Brent has settled around $109 as traders price extended uncertainty rather than full reopening.

Russia Breaks Kyiv’s Truce With 108 Drones and Three Missiles Overnight

Ukraine said Russia violated its unilateral 5–6 May ceasefire by launching 108 attack drones and three missiles at Ukrainian cities overnight. Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said “Putin only cares about military parades, not human lives”, in reference to Moscow’s rival 8–9 May Victory Day truce. Ukrainian air defences engaged the bulk of the swarm; impacts were reported in Kharkiv, Sumy and Zaporizhzhia regions.

Dive deeper
Kyiv’s 5–6 May truce was always intended to expose Moscow’s parade-protection truce as performative, and Russia’s overnight breach delivers exactly that political result. The 108-drone barrage is the largest single-night Shahed launch since March, and the targeting pattern suggests Moscow wants to fix Ukrainian air defences in place ahead of any follow-on missile salvo. The Victory Day parade itself has been scaled back to the smallest in two decades, with no tanks or strategic missile systems present — a tacit admission of equipment shortages. Russian combat losses have now passed 1.34 million personnel since February 2022.

Russia Strikes Ukraine Naftogaz Facility; Death Toll 27 Across Two Days

Russian strikes on Tuesday killed at least 27 people across Ukrainian cities, including five at a Naftogaz gas facility hit by a missile in the south. Glide bombs killed 12 in Zaporizhzhia, hitting a car repair shop and residential blocks in one of the worst attacks on the city this year. President Zelensky condemned what he called Moscow’s “utter cynicism” in calling for a Victory Day truce while continuing daily strikes.

Dive deeper
Targeting Naftogaz infrastructure ahead of summer is strategically calibrated: although Ukraine’s gas demand falls in warmer months, the country must rebuild storage and repair injection capacity now to be ready for next winter. The pattern of concentrated strikes on Zaporizhzhia indicates Russian forces are softening defences ahead of an expected summer push around the Dnipro. Western air-defence resupply has slowed in recent weeks as Patriot interceptor stocks are diverted to the Gulf. The result is a rising tempo of successful Russian strikes against urban targets that would have been intercepted in the first quarter.

Starmer Condemns UAE Strikes — “Escalation Must Cease”

Sir Keir Starmer used a brief Downing Street statement on Tuesday to condemn the strikes on the United Arab Emirates and call for “escalation to cease”, his first substantive public intervention on the Gulf crisis in over a week. The Prime Minister pledged the United Kingdom would continue to support its Gulf partners. RAF Typhoons remain at Diego Garcia and HMS Duncan is on station in the Arabian Sea. The statement came hours before campaigning was due to wind down ahead of Thursday’s polls.

Dive deeper
Foreign-policy interventions are politically risky for a Prime Minister polling at 22%, but the UAE attacks gave Starmer rare cover to project statesmanship at a moment when domestic news is uniformly hostile. Whitehall has been quietly working to keep the UK’s Gulf footprint in step with Washington while avoiding direct combat — a balance that has held since the 8 April ceasefire but is now under pressure. Reports suggest the National Security Council is considering further air-defence assistance to the UAE. Whether voters notice the intervention before they cast ballots tomorrow is doubtful: the doorstep conversation remains pump prices, channel crossings and Mandelson.

UK UK Domestic Politics

One Day to Polling — “Starmer’s Referendum” Looms

Voters across England, Wales and Scotland head to the polls tomorrow in elections all major parties have framed as a verdict on Sir Keir Starmer’s two-year-old government. Devolved elections to the Senedd and Scottish Parliament run alongside English council polls. Reform UK, the Greens and the nationalist parties are forecast to be the principal beneficiaries; Labour is bracing for losses of up to 2,000 council seats and the loss of the Senedd for the first time.

Dive deeper
The referendum framing is itself a novelty: midterm local elections are usually presented by the governing party as ward-level contests. Starmer’s campaign team accepted the national framing only when it became clear the polling could not be reframed downwards. Cabinet contingency planning for a Friday morning leadership challenge is reportedly already in place, with whip counts circulating. The Parliamentary Labour Party’s nomination threshold — 20% of MPs — means at least 80 nominations are needed to put a name on any future ballot, a number any plausible challenger can clear given current discontent.

YouGov Final MRP: Reform Tops Poll in All 13 West Midlands Councils

YouGov’s pre-election MRP, finalised this morning, projects Reform UK leading the poll in all 13 West Midlands council areas. The model puts Reform on 45% in Cannock Chase and 43% in Nuneaton and Tamworth, with a regional vote share of 30% across the 13 councils. London projections show Reform leading on three borough councils for the first time. Nationally, the model has Reform on 27% and Labour on 12%.

Dive deeper
The West Midlands result is the bellwether: the region voted for Brexit, swung to Boris Johnson in 2019 and to Labour in 2024, and is now consolidating behind Reform. If MRP-projected vote shares hold, Reform will inherit not just councils but the operational machinery — staff, buildings, procurement budgets — that turns a protest movement into a party of administration. London is the more politically explosive number: Reform topping a single London council was unthinkable two years ago. Labour’s 12% national share would be the worst Labour performance in any nationwide vote since 1918.

Streeting, Rayner, Burnham: Successor Plumbing Already in Place

Parliamentary briefings now openly discuss successor candidates ahead of any Friday morning leadership challenge. Health Secretary Wes Streeting, former Deputy PM Angela Rayner and Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham are the named contingencies. Cabinet ministers are reportedly being polled by whips to test loyalty; lobby briefings overnight indicated at least three Cabinet ministers have privately concluded Sir Keir’s position is no longer tenable beyond the weekend.

Dive deeper
Each successor implies a different fiscal posture. Streeting is the centrist continuity option, likely to retain Reeves’s framework and reassure gilt markets. Rayner draws on Labour’s soft left and would face immediate questions about borrowing and tax. Burnham must first secure a parliamentary seat — a process that takes weeks and effectively requires a sitting MP to stand down for him. The PLP’s nomination rules favour the candidate with the largest existing parliamentary base, which currently means Streeting. None of the three has formally declared, and none will before the polls close, but private soundings have been under way for at least a fortnight.

Gilts Trade Through 5%; Sterling Holds $1.2965; FTSE Drifts to 8,210

Ten-year gilt yields traded above 5% in early Wednesday trading as the bond market priced election uncertainty alongside the second day of UAE strikes. Sterling held narrowly above $1.2965 against the dollar; the FTSE 100 drifted to 8,210, a 0.66% decline, with energy stocks lower as Brent eased to $109.50. Bitcoin broke $80,000 overnight in Asian trading. Reeves’s fiscal headroom is now exhausted at these gilt levels.

Dive deeper
The gilt market is functioning, but it is functioning under stress. The third consecutive session of double-digit basis-point intraday swings is the kind of pattern that prompts pension trustees to call emergency board meetings. The Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee is monitoring; market participants expect a verbal intervention from the Governor before Thursday’s open if yields move materially higher. The Treasury has cancelled a planned gilt auction tap scheduled for Thursday morning — an attempt to remove a supply event from a sensitive 24-hour window. The Bitcoin move reflects safe-haven flows and dollar weakness rather than crypto-specific catalysts.

Channel Crossings Total Hits 6,400; Doorstep Issue Number One

Border Force responded to additional small-boat sightings overnight, taking the cumulative 2026 crossings total above 6,400 — on track to overtake last year’s record before the summer crossing season begins. The Home Office continues to point to 42,000 prevented crossings under the Anglo-French enforcement deal. Doorstep canvassers across coastal and southern seats report the issue has overtaken cost of living as the single most-mentioned topic.

Dive deeper
The 6,400 figure is the fastest pre-summer accumulation on record, well ahead of the same point in 2024 and 2025. The political timing is devastating for Labour: every doorstep conversation in Kent, Sussex and Essex coastal seats now hinges on a number the government cannot meaningfully reduce in 24 hours. The Anglo-French agreement signed in March has made marginal differences to the supply side, but smuggling networks have rerouted around the new enforcement zones. Yvette Cooper has no scheduled media tomorrow — an absence opposition strategists will exploit on the morning shows.
One To Read

Starmer’s Referendum: How Local Elections Could Expose a Fractured UK

Al Jazeera · A clear-eyed survey of how the four-party fracture has reshaped local politics, with Reform, the Greens and the nationalist parties all eating into Labour’s historic base. Maps the constituency-level mechanics that turn 27% national vote shares into council majorities, and asks whether multiparty politics now make a working Labour majority structurally impossible.
§

Weekly Roundup

The stories that defined this week View roundup
Week of 27 April–3 May 2026

The Week In Numbers

  • Brent crude traced its widest weekly range since the war began — opening near $108, spiking to $126 overnight on Wednesday after Trump’s “choking like a stuffed pig” blockade pledge, then settling at $109.96 on Friday as Tehran’s 14-point proposal was forwarded through Pakistan. The trading corridor has now stabilised in the $107–$111 band, but Goldman Sachs maintains its $115 three-month target and Citi’s $150 scenario is no longer treated as an outlier
  • Ten-year gilt yields broke through 5 per cent on Tuesday for the first sustained period since 2008, peaked at 5.13 per cent on Wednesday morning, and closed Friday at 4.96 per cent — below the threshold but with the “Starmer premium” firmly entrenched. The Bank of England held Bank Rate at 3.75 per cent in an 8–1 split, with Chief Economist Huw Pill alone dissenting for a hike; Bailey abandoned the single forecast for the first time and published three war scenarios with CPI peaking between 3.5 per cent and above 6 per cent
  • Lloyds Banking Group cut its 2026 UK GDP forecast to 0.5 per cent, lifted CPI to 3.4 per cent, withdrew its expectation of any rate cuts this year and projected unemployment peaking at 5.6 per cent — the first major UK-specific stagflation downgrade of the cycle. Pump prices held at 165–170p with diesel above 200p, and final pre-election polls put Reform at 27–28 per cent against Labour’s 18–19 per cent with four days to local elections

What Moved Forward

Iran Submits 14-Point Peace Plan via Pakistan

Geopolitical

Tehran on Saturday formally lodged a fourteen-point proposal through Pakistani intermediaries, the most detailed offer of the war and the first to engage with Washington’s nuclear demands rather than ringfencing them. Trump confirmed overnight he would “soon be reviewing” the document but warned of renewed war if Iran “misbehaves”, telling reporters he “can’t imagine” the plan would prove acceptable. The submission preserves the diplomatic channel and gives both sides cover for further inaction; whether it produces a durable framework or simply absorbs another rejection cycle will define the second half of May.

King Charles Addresses Joint Session of Congress

Geopolitical

King Charles III on Tuesday became the first British king — and only the second British monarch — to address a joint session of the United States Congress, describing the past 250 years as a story of “reconciliation and renewal” producing “one of the greatest alliances in human history”. The state visit, which included an Oval Office meeting, a White House banquet, and a 9/11 memorial stop in New York, generated the warmest UK–US imagery in years. The political effect was muted by the simultaneous Privileges Committee vote in Westminster, which split the screen unhelpfully, but the underlying message — that the institutional alliance is intact regardless of Downing Street’s troubles — landed cleanly in Washington.

Ukraine’s Long-Range Campaign Reaches Strategic Depth

Geopolitical

Kyiv struck the Tuapse oil refinery on the Black Sea coast for the fourth time in a fortnight, hit a Transneft pumping station 1,400 kilometres deep in Perm Krai — the longest-range strike of the war — and confirmed the destruction of a Russian Su-57 stealth fighter on the ground at Chelyabinsk. Western strike packages are now arriving at operational units in volume, and Moscow has pulled air-defence allocation south to protect refining capacity. The campaign has transitioned from harassment to attrition: Russia must now choose between protecting front-line assets and protecting the economic engine that funds them.

Privileges Committee Referral Defeated — But Fifteen Labour Abstentions

Domestic

The Conservative motion to refer the Prime Minister to the Privileges Committee over the Mandelson vetting process was defeated on Tuesday evening, but fifteen Labour MPs declined the three-line whip and abstained — the largest open dissent of this Parliament. McSweeney’s “serious error of judgement” testimony to the Foreign Affairs Committee, in which he described seeing the Mandelson–Epstein photographs as “a knife through my soul”, made the whip materially harder to enforce. The vote bought Starmer time but signalled that parliamentary discipline is fraying ahead of polling day.

What Stalled

US–Iran Diplomatic Track Collapses Into Total Deadlock

Geopolitical

The week opened with Secretary of State Rubio rejecting Tehran’s Hormuz-for-ports proposal as “unacceptable”, hardened mid-week into Trump’s “choking like a stuffed pig” pledge to maintain the blockade until Iran abandons enrichment, and closed with Trump telling reporters he was “not satisfied” with the revised proposal and might be “better off without a deal at all”. Iran insists Hormuz transit and the nuclear file are separate sovereign matters; Washington insists they are inseparable. Forty-eight ships have been turned away from Iranian ports in twenty days; 20,000 mariners remain stranded in the Gulf. The structural gap on enrichment is now the binding constraint, and neither side can concede without undermining its core position.

Lebanon Ceasefire Fraying — Worst 24-Hour Toll Since Extension

Geopolitical

Israeli airstrikes on three south Lebanon villages overnight Friday killed nine people, including two children and five women — the worst breach of the April truce since it took effect. Sunday’s strikes raised the 24-hour toll to 41, with approximately 50 Hezbollah-linked sites destroyed across Siddiqine, Bint Jbeil and Al Smaaiyah. Prime Minister Salam called the original strikes “a flagrant violation”; France is preparing a Security Council protest. The Lebanon track has functioned as the region’s sole stable element since 17 April; that classification no longer applies, and an Iranian military official confirmed on Sunday that renewed war with the United States remains “a possibility”.

Putin’s Victory Day Truce Gambit Rejected

Geopolitical

President Putin used a 90-minute call with Trump on Tuesday evening to propose a one-day Ukraine ceasefire over the 9 May Victory Day parade, with the Kremlin tying the concession to potential Russian intercession on Iran. Trump publicly endorsed the proposal; President Zelensky dismissed it as “manipulation” and countered with a “long-term, reliable, guaranteed” ceasefire, asking whether the offer covered “a few hours of security for a parade in Moscow, or something more”. The exchange neutralises Putin’s pageantry trap but leaves the structural gap on Donbas territory untouched. Polymarket prices a 2026 ceasefire at 25.5 per cent.

Labour Leadership Succession Now Discussed in Print

Domestic

Bloomberg, British Brief and the Telegraph all reported this week that succession planning is now openly under way, with Wes Streeting reportedly securing more than 81 declarations and Angela Rayner positioned as the membership and union choice. Andy Burnham — consistently the strongest hypothetical leader in private polling — has been excluded on the grounds that securing a Westminster seat would take too long. Starmer was unable to confirm at PMQs that Reeves would remain as Chancellor; Cooper and Miliband are both being briefed for the Treasury. The reshuffle pencilled for Monday 11 May will be calibrated to the scale of Thursday’s losses.

What To Watch Next Week

Local Elections Thursday 7 May — Reform Projected 67 Councils

Domestic

Polling day is four days away. Reform UK is projected to take control of 67 councils from a starting position of zero; Labour is forecast to fall from 92 to 16 majorities and lose between 1,500 and 1,900 of the 2,557 seats it is defending. Sunderland, Wakefield, Thurrock and Barnsley are expected to flip from Labour to Reform; Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk from no-overall-control or Conservative to Reform. Forty-seven councils in total are projected to change hands — the largest churn since 1995. Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds are the bellwethers: if any falls, the parliamentary arithmetic for a confidence move changes overnight.

Senate War Powers Vote Tuesday — 60-Day Clock Expired

Geopolitical

The 60-day War Powers Resolution window for Operation Epic Fury expired on Friday without congressional authorisation. Senator Chris Murphy will introduce a privileged resolution on Tuesday demanding US forces withdraw from hostilities with Iran absent a formal declaration of war; six Republicans have indicated support and Senate passage now appears likely. The President has signalled an immediate veto and the House remains aligned with the administration, making override mathematically improbable — but each successive 60-day window will force a fresh floor vote, locking the campaign into a rolling political dispute through the midterms and energising opposition to the $1.5 trillion war supplemental.

Bank Holiday Tuesday Open — Gilts and Oil Reset

Markets

Markets reopen on Tuesday morning to whatever has happened over the bank holiday weekend — a more dangerous setup than usual given thin liquidity and elevated geopolitical risk. Gilts at 4.96 per cent have tested 5 per cent four times in ten days; each test weakens the resistance and a Sunday-paper poll shock or a US rejection of the 14-point plan would push yields back through. Pill’s lone dissent gives markets a hawkish anchor for the June meeting; if the May inflation print exceeds 4 per cent, his minority view becomes the baseline. The Office for Budget Responsibility’s urgent fiscal-sustainability update is scheduled for 12 May.

Reshuffle 11 May — Cooper, Miliband, or Reset

Domestic

The post-election reshuffle remains pencilled for Monday 11 May, with scope determined by the scale of Thursday’s losses. A bad night triggers a limited reshuffle with Reeves as the headline casualty and Cooper at the Treasury; a catastrophic night — losing Birmingham, Manchester or Leeds — could trigger a wholesale Cabinet reset, with Labour’s soft Left pressing for Miliband at the Treasury and bond traders flagging a 25 basis-point spread widening on that choice. Sacking Reeves does not lower the price of oil; replacing ministers does not reopen Hormuz. The reshuffle’s political utility runs only as far as the next pump-price fortnight.

One To Read This Weekend

Trump Said His Blockade Would Cause Iran’s Oil Industry to ‘Explode’ This Week. Why That Won’t Happen

CNBC · The indispensable explainer on why the physical mechanics of Iran’s oil industry mean Trump’s blockade timetable cannot deliver a rapid collapse — and therefore why the standoff is likely to last months rather than weeks. Read this to frame the 14-point plan, the gilt market’s 5 per cent tests and the Bank of England’s three war scenarios as a single connected story.
☼

Morning Briefing

Tuesday 5 May 2026 — 07:59 BST

What It Means For You

  • Brent settled overnight at $114.20 after Monday’s 5.96% surge to $114.44, the highest level since the war began. UK pump prices are projected to add a further 4–6p over the week, taking petrol towards 175p and diesel above 205p. With London markets reopening this morning after the bank holiday, the FTSE is indicated to open down half a percent and gilts to sell off through 5.0%.
  • Iran fired four cruise missiles at the UAE last night and struck the Fujairah oil zone with a drone — the first direct attack on Emirati soil since the 8 April ceasefire. Three Indian workers were injured. Trump’s ‘Project Freedom’ began guiding ships through the Strait of Hormuz on Monday; two US-flagged vessels exited successfully but Iranian forces traded fire with US assets within hours.
  • Two days remain until Thursday’s local elections. With Parliament in recess, the campaign is now reduced to broadcast set-pieces and doorstep work. Reform UK is projected to gain 67 councils from a base of zero, while Labour is forecast to lose three-quarters of its council majorities. Bitcoin briefly broke $80,000 in Asian trading overnight, its first time at that level since January.

Iran War — Day 66. The war started 28 February 2026. Iran strikes UAE overnight: four cruise missiles, drone hits Fujairah oil zone, three injured. Project Freedom begins; US and Iranian forces trade shots in Hormuz; ceasefire status unclear. Brent settled at $114.20. Lebanon death toll since 2 March now 2,696. Ukraine declares unilateral truce 5–6 May; rejects Russia’s 8–9 May Victory Day truce as “not serious”. London markets reopen at 08:00 after bank holiday Monday. Two days to local elections.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Strikes UAE Overnight — Four Missiles, Drone Hits Fujairah Oil Zone

Iran fired four cruise missiles at the United Arab Emirates late Monday; three were intercepted over Emirati territorial waters and one fell into the sea. Separately, a drone strike at the Fujairah Petroleum Industries Zone ignited a major fire that injured three Indian workers. It is the first direct Iranian attack on UAE soil since the Pakistani-mediated 8 April ceasefire and follows the launch of Trump’s ‘Project Freedom’ operation in Hormuz hours earlier.

Dive deeper
An Iranian military official told state media that Tehran “had no plan” to attack the UAE, suggesting the strike may have been authorised by an IRGC commander rather than the central political leadership. That ambiguity is itself dangerous because it indicates the chain of command can no longer be relied upon to hold. The Fujairah strike is strategically calibrated: the FOIZ handles bunkering for tankers re-routed to avoid Hormuz, so hitting it threatens the alternative shipping route as well as the strait itself. Israel and Bahrain are now on heightened alert, and the Saudi response over the next 24 hours will be watched closely. The 8 April ceasefire architecture is functionally over.

Project Freedom Begins — Two US-Flagged Ships Exit Hormuz

US Central Command launched Project Freedom on Monday morning Gulf time, deploying destroyers, more than 100 aircraft and 15,000 personnel to clear a one-way exit corridor through the Strait of Hormuz. CENTCOM confirmed two US-flagged vessels were assisted out of the strait by mid-afternoon. The operation explicitly does not involve direct escort of commercial ships, with Cooper conceding the Navy lacks the assets to escort the hundreds of vessels currently stranded.

Dive deeper
The semantic distinction between “escorting” and “guiding” matters operationally and politically. Direct escort would oblige the US Navy to engage Iranian forces firing on commercial vessels under its protection; a one-way defensive corridor permits selective engagement and plausible disengagement. Two ships exiting in a day is symbolic rather than substantive: roughly 2,000 ships and 20,000 mariners remain stranded in the Gulf. The deeper risk is that Project Freedom forces Iran into a binary choice between accepting US dominance of the strait or attacking US assets — and Tehran’s Monday strikes on the UAE suggest it has chosen the latter. Markets will price an extended blockade through the summer.

US and Iranian Forces Trade Shots in Strait — Trump Refuses to Confirm Truce

The US and Iranian militaries exchanged fire in the Strait of Hormuz on Monday after the launch of Project Freedom, marking the most serious direct US-Iran exchange since the April ceasefire. Asked by conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt whether the truce remained in force, President Trump replied: “Well, I can’t tell you that.” He warned Iranian forces they would be “blown off the face of the Earth” if they targeted US ships in the strait or wider Persian Gulf.

Dive deeper
Trump’s public refusal to confirm the ceasefire is a tell: it preserves his freedom to either escalate or de-escalate depending on the next 48 hours of Iranian behaviour. The exchange of shots was reportedly low-intensity — warning fire rather than targeted strikes — but the fact that no political channel intervened to prevent it is significant. The diplomatic apparatus that managed the April ceasefire (Pakistani mediation, the 14-point Iranian proposal) is now visibly inactive. Tehran’s 14-point plan was always going to founder on the nuclear question; what has replaced it is a return to the kinetic phase of the war, this time with US forces engaged on a near-daily basis rather than only in set-piece strikes.

Lebanon Death Toll Hits 2,696 as Israel Issues New Displacement Orders

Lebanon’s Ministry of Health confirmed late Monday that Israeli operations have killed 2,696 people in the country since the 2 March escalation. The IDF issued fresh displacement orders covering villages in southern Lebanon beyond its current zone of occupation, in a move Beirut characterised as a “de facto annexation”. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said no peace talks could begin until Israel implemented the existing ceasefire in full.

Dive deeper
The Lebanon track has been deteriorating in slow motion since mid-April; Monday’s expanded displacement orders mark a qualitative shift towards permanent Israeli presence beyond the original buffer zone. Reports indicate that if no agreement is reached by mid-May, Israel intends to seek US backing for an expanded ground campaign — a move that would shatter the regional ceasefire architecture. Hezbollah, never a formal signatory to the April truce, retains the option to escalate without breaching any signed commitment. The convergence of Lebanon escalation with the Hormuz crisis is the worst-case scenario regional analysts have warned of for two months.

Ukraine Declares Unilateral Truce; Rejects Russia’s Victory Day Ceasefire

Ukraine announced a unilateral ceasefire from midnight tonight running into the morning of 6 May, after rejecting Russia’s declared 8–9 May truce timed for the 81st anniversary of Soviet Victory in WWII. President Zelensky called observing a Russian military holiday “not serious”. Ukrainian drones struck a high-rise residential complex in Moscow overnight; Russia launched 70 drones at Ukraine in a single afternoon and missile strikes killed at least eight in Kharkiv region.

Dive deeper
Competing ceasefire windows have become a propaganda battleground rather than a serious de-escalation effort. Kyiv’s 5–6 May truce is calibrated to expose Moscow’s 8–9 May version as a parade-protection measure rather than a peace gesture. The Moscow drone strike, ahead of the Victory Day Parade rehearsals, is a deliberate signal that Russian airspace is no longer secure even in the capital. Putin has revealed that GDP contracted in the first two months of 2026, and Russian forces suffered net territorial losses last month for the first time since 2024 — the strategic balance has quietly shifted, even as the daily death toll mounts.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Two Days to Polling — Reform Projected to Take 67 Councils

Two days from Thursday’s local elections, Reform UK remains on course to take control of 67 councils from a starting position of zero. Labour is forecast to lose three-quarters of its 92 council majorities. Sunderland, Wakefield, Thurrock and Barnsley are all projected to flip from Labour to Reform; Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk are forecast to fall to Reform from no-overall-control or Conservative administrations. The bank holiday weekend confirmed Labour’s polling has not moved.

Dive deeper
A jump from zero councils to 67 has no modern parallel. The councils projected to flip are Labour’s industrial heartland, held for generations rather than swing territory. The Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk shifts are arguably more politically significant: they convert Reform from a protest insurgency into a party that runs services, sets council tax and writes planning policy. YouGov’s West Midlands MRP, published over the weekend, has Reform topping the poll in all 13 council areas — a clean sweep in territory the party held no councillors in 2022. The implication is that the 67-council projection may understate the true scale of Reform’s gains.

Starmer’s Approval at 22% as Final Campaign Push Begins

Just 22% of Britons believe Sir Keir Starmer is doing well as Prime Minister, according to YouGov’s pre-election readout published over the bank holiday weekend. The Mandelson-Epstein scandal continues to drag; the Greens are polling 13–16% and competing with Labour in urban seats. The Prime Minister has no scheduled broadcast appearances today. Reform leader Nigel Farage has confirmed his £5 million pre-election spending push has now exhausted, with all final-week effort directed to the West Midlands.

Dive deeper
A 22% approval rating two days from a national vote is the worst Prime Ministerial position recorded ahead of any local elections in the YouGov series. Starmer’s problem is that the structural factors driving his unpopularity — high pump prices, the Mandelson scandal, the Iran war — are entirely outside his immediate control. The contrast with Farage, who has run a tightly-disciplined target-seat campaign, is unflattering. Internal Labour briefing now openly acknowledges the “catastrophe scenario” in which the party loses Sunderland, Wakefield and Barnsley simultaneously — a result that would trigger an immediate succession contest by Friday lunchtime.

Channel Crossings — Almost 900 Cross in 72 Hours; Two Drown South of Boulogne

Border Force vessels responded to multiple small-boat sightings over the bank holiday weekend, with almost 900 migrants crossing since Friday. The cumulative total for 2026 now stands at 6,077 — one of the highest early-year figures on record. Two migrants died on Sunday when their boat got into difficulties south of Boulogne. The Home Office reiterated that the new Anglo-French enforcement deal has stopped 42,000 attempted crossings since the election.

Dive deeper
A weekend total of 900 crossings is the worst pre-election news the Home Office could deliver, validating the Reform campaign’s central claim that Labour has failed to control the border. The 6,077 cumulative figure puts 2026 on track to exceed 2024’s total before the summer crossing season has even begun. The two deaths near Boulogne are a tragic but politically combustible reminder that the smuggling networks remain operational despite the new French agreement. Yvette Cooper has no public appearances scheduled today — an absence opposition strategists will exploit. The crossings story has now overtaken the cost of living as the dominant doorstep concern in coastal constituencies.

Markets Reopen After Bank Holiday — Gilts Indicated Through 5%

London markets reopen at 08:00 BST after Monday’s early May bank holiday. The FTSE 100 is indicated to open down 0.54% at around 8,265, weighed down by Wall Street’s Monday session and the weekend’s geopolitical escalation. Ten-year gilt yields are indicated to gap through 5.00% on the open as traders price the Brent surge and the renewed Iran-UAE tensions. Sterling is trading at $1.2945, its lowest level since mid-April.

Dive deeper
Tuesday after a UK bank holiday is always a higher-risk session because three calendar days of global news have to be priced in a single open. The combined catalyst list — Brent at $114, Iranian missile strikes on the UAE, US-Iran exchange of fire in Hormuz, Bitcoin breaking $80,000 — is the heaviest opening backdrop since Day 1 of the war. The gilt move is the one to watch: a clean break above 5.00% would trigger pension-fund LDI hedging flows and risk a self-reinforcing sell-off, particularly with Andrew Bailey not scheduled to speak until Wednesday. Reeves is reportedly being briefed hourly by Treasury officials.

Petrol at 168p as Pump Prices Set to Climb to 175p This Week

Average UK petrol prices remain at 165–170p, with diesel above 200p at mainstream forecourts and 220p at motorway services, RAC and AA data confirm. The 5.96% Brent surge on Monday is expected to feed through to the pumps from mid-week, taking petrol towards 175p and diesel above 205p. The cumulative additional fuel cost since 28 February now exceeds £260 per car, equivalent to roughly £5.7 billion across 22 million UK households.

Dive deeper
Pump-price movements typically lag wholesale moves by 7–10 days, meaning Monday’s Brent surge will reach forecourts on or shortly after polling day. The political timing could not be worse for Labour: Reform’s campaign messaging on the cost of living has been drumming the petrol-price figure for three weeks, and the next price tick will arrive while voters are still queuing at polling stations. There is no operational lever the government can pull in 72 hours: a fuel duty cut would require parliamentary approval after recess, and a strategic-reserve release through the IEA remains in “final stages” with no announced date. The petrol price has become the defining variable of the election.
One To Read

Why US Warships Won’t Be Escorting Merchant Ships Through Strait of Hormuz

CNN · A clear-eyed account of the operational gap between Trump’s ‘Project Freedom’ rhetoric and what the US Navy can actually deliver. Explains why direct escort is impossible, how the “guidance corridor” works in practice, and why the operation may force Tehran into a binary escalation choice.
☽

Evening Briefing

Monday 4 May 2026 — 20:15 BST

What It Means For You

  • Iran fired missiles at the United Arab Emirates this afternoon — the first activation of UAE air defences since the April ceasefire began — as President Trump launched “Project Freedom”, a US Navy escort operation through the Strait of Hormuz. Trump said the US military shot down seven Iranian boats and warned that any attempt to target US vessels would see Iranian forces “blown off the face of the Earth”. Brent surged 6% to $114.44; pump prices on UK forecourts will pass through to consumers on Tuesday.
  • The S&P 500 closed down 0.5% and the Dow fell 564 points after the UAE attack reignited recession fears. The VIX jumped to a six-week high of 36.5 and gold posted a fresh record. Sterling weakened to $1.296 on dollar safe-haven flows; gilts remain closed for the bank holiday but US Treasury yields fell to 4.48%. Tuesday’s London open will be the first full UK price discovery since Friday and is set up for sharp moves.
  • The local elections are now three days away. Bloomberg expert analysis projects Labour will lose 1,850 seats on Thursday; YouGov MRPs show Reform UK leading in 11 of 13 West Midlands councils and Labour set for historic losses across London. The Iran-driven oil shock has wiped out most of Chancellor Reeves’s remaining fiscal headroom; Treasury officials confirm the Spring Statement arithmetic no longer holds at $114 Brent. The bank holiday gave a one-day campaign pause; final pitches resume tomorrow.

Iran War — Day 65. The war started 28 February 2026. Iran fired missiles at the UAE this afternoon — the first UAE air-defence activation since the April ceasefire. Trump launched “Project Freedom” naval escort through the Strait of Hormuz; the US military shot down seven Iranian boats. Brent surged to $114.44 (+5.96%); WTI to $106.42 (+4%). Trump warned Iran would be “blown off the face of the Earth” for any strike on US ships. Tehran says “Project Freedom” violates the ceasefire. The next ceasefire reassessment is scheduled for Friday 8 May.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Strikes UAE as Trump Launches Hormuz Escort Operation

Iran fired missiles at the United Arab Emirates on Monday afternoon, marking the first activation of UAE air-defence systems since the April ceasefire began. The strikes coincided with the launch of “Project Freedom”, a US Navy escort mission to bring stranded commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz. President Trump said US forces shot down seven Iranian boats after Tehran targeted other vessels attempting to traverse the passage. He warned on Truth Social that Iran would be “blown off the face of the Earth” if it struck US ships.

Dive deeper
An Iranian strike on the UAE crosses the most important regional redline of the war. Abu Dhabi has held diplomatic distance from the conflict since February, hosting back-channel talks and resisting US pressure to join the blockade publicly. A direct attack on Emirati territory shifts the balance: Gulf states that have hedged on the war must now decide whether to coordinate openly with Washington or seek separate security guarantees. Iran’s decision to strike was almost certainly authorised at IRGC senior level, and the targeting suggests an intent to demonstrate that “Project Freedom” carries unacceptable costs. The seven-boat engagement is the largest US-Iran maritime clash of the war.
↻ Yesterday: Trump “reviewing” 14-point plan → Today: Project Freedom launched, UAE struck, seven Iranian boats destroyed.

Brent Surges 6% to $114.44 as Markets Reprice Hormuz Risk

International benchmark Brent crude rose nearly 6% to close at $114.44 per barrel on Monday after news of the UAE attack and the first US-Iran maritime engagement of the new operation. US West Texas Intermediate climbed more than 4% to settle at $106.42. The S&P 500 closed down 0.5%; the Dow fell 564 points or 1.1%. The VIX volatility index jumped to 36.5, its highest level since mid-March. CNBC reported markets are now pricing a non-trivial probability of US recession by year-end.

Dive deeper
A $6 single-day move in Brent on a confirmed direct Iran-Gulf-state attack is contained relative to historical equivalents, suggesting traders had partially priced the escalation. The more telling signal is the VIX move: a jump from 31.8 to 36.5 indicates derivatives desks are now positioning for a sustained volatility regime rather than a one-day shock. Gold’s fresh record close at $4,858 confirms the safe-haven bid is structural rather than tactical. The combination of higher oil, higher volatility and weaker risk assets is the classic stagflation trade; Federal Reserve commentary this week will be watched for any signal of a policy response.
↻ Friday close: Brent $109.96, VIX 31.80 → Monday close: Brent $114.44 (+6%), VIX 36.50 (+15%).

Russian Missiles Kill Five in Kharkiv as Drones Hit Moscow

Russian missile and drone strikes killed at least five people and wounded over 30 in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region overnight into Monday, according to Ukrainian regional officials cited by Al Jazeera. In response, Ukrainian long-range drones struck targets in Moscow, with explosions reported near the city’s outer ring road. President Zelensky travelled to Armenia for a European leaders’ summit, his first visit to the Caucasus since the war began. Peace talks scheduled for this week have been postponed indefinitely, with the United States citing the deteriorating Middle East situation.

Dive deeper
Drone strikes inside Moscow city limits remain rare and are politically significant. The Kremlin has scaled back this year’s Victory Day parade on 9 May, removing cadets and most heavy hardware — an explicit acknowledgement of Ukrainian deep-strike capability. Zelensky’s Armenia visit reflects a broader Ukrainian campaign to court Caucasus and Central Asian states traditionally inside Russia’s diplomatic orbit. The postponement of US-mediated peace talks because of Hormuz signals that Ukraine remains second-tier on Washington’s agenda; Kyiv is privately briefing that Trump’s focus on Iran is buying Russia time to consolidate spring offensive gains.

Tehran: “Project Freedom” Violates Ceasefire

Senior Iranian lawmaker Ebrahim Azizi told Iranian state media on Monday morning that any US interference in the Strait of Hormuz, including Trump’s newly announced escort operation, would constitute a violation of the April ceasefire and licence Iranian forces to respond. The statement preceded the UAE attack by several hours and was treated by US officials as a notification of intent. The Foreign Ministry has not formally responded; the IRGC has placed all Gulf naval and missile units on combat readiness.

Dive deeper
Azizi’s framing — pre-positioning the legal justification before military action — is a classic Iranian escalation pattern observed in 2019 and 2024. It allows Tehran to claim the response was reactive rather than offensive, complicating Washington’s narrative-management. The next 72 hours are the highest-risk window of the war: the ceasefire reassessment is scheduled for Friday, and either side has incentive to establish new facts on the ground before that meeting. Iran in particular is signalling that it will not allow the blockade to be normalised through unilateral US action without a kinetic response.

Friday Ceasefire Review Becomes the Critical Diplomatic Deadline

The current Iran-US ceasefire is scheduled for formal reassessment on Friday 8 May, the deadline set when the agreement was extended in mid-April. With Monday’s UAE attack, the seven-boat engagement and the launch of “Project Freedom”, the agreement is now functionally moribund three days before its review. The IAEA has requested urgent renewed access to Iranian nuclear sites; Tehran has not responded. European officials told Bloomberg they are pressing for a 72-hour de-escalation window before Friday’s meeting.

Dive deeper
A ceasefire agreement that survives a direct attack on a Gulf state and a maritime engagement does so only on paper. The Friday meeting is now less about extending the ceasefire and more about formalising whatever new posture both sides have arrived at by then. The IAEA inspection request is the leading indicator to watch: if Iran refuses access, the diplomatic track is over and the question becomes how the next phase of the war is structured. Markets are pricing roughly a one-in-three chance of a return to active strikes within 30 days; that probability has risen sharply since this morning.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Three Days to Polling — Bloomberg Projects 1,850 Labour Seat Losses

With three days to local elections on Thursday, expert analysis published by Bloomberg projects Labour will lose 1,850 council seats, the largest single-night loss for any incumbent governing party since the introduction of universal suffrage. The forecast draws on YouGov MRP modelling showing Reform UK leading in 11 of 13 West Midlands councils and Labour facing historic losses across London boroughs. Andy Burnham warned the elections would be “challenging”; cabinet sources told the Guardian privately that 2,000 losses are now seen as the realistic ceiling.

Dive deeper
A loss of 1,850 seats would represent roughly 37% of all Labour council seats up for election — an order of magnitude beyond the worst single nights of the post-2010 period. The geographic distribution is the more important detail: losses are concentrated in long-held northern and Welsh authorities rather than the marginal English shire seats Labour expected to lose. Reform’s projected dominance in the West Midlands, including the metro mayoralty, would give the party functional control of regional economic policy in an area that voted heavily Labour at the 2024 general election. The structural realignment is now arriving rather than being projected.
↻ Friday: 1,500-seat loss the central case → Today: 1,850 the central case, 2,000 the realistic ceiling.

Reeves’ Fiscal Buffer Erased as Brent Hits $114

Treasury officials briefed today that the Spring Statement’s £9.9 billion of fiscal headroom no longer holds following Brent’s surge to $114.44. Bloomberg reported on 21 April that the Iran war could erase “most of Reeves’s buffer”; today’s oil move converts that warning into mathematical fact at current price levels. The OBR’s March central forecast assumed Brent at $82 average over 2026; the year-to-date average is now above $108 and rising. An emergency fiscal statement before the autumn Budget is now under active consideration.

Dive deeper
A buffer of £9.9 billion was already historically thin by post-2010 standards. Erasing it before the local elections, in election week, is a political and economic event simultaneously. Reeves now faces three options: tax rises in the autumn Budget, deeper spending cuts, or revising the fiscal rules — each of which carries direct political cost in the immediate aftermath of a likely heavy electoral defeat. The autumn Budget timetable is now the central political question of Starmer’s premiership; an emergency interim statement, perhaps in late June, looks increasingly likely. Markets will reopen Tuesday morning with that calculation priced in.
↻ 21 April: Bloomberg flags buffer at risk → 4 May: Buffer mathematically erased at current Brent levels.

Starmer Approval at 22% — Joint-Lowest Since Taking Office

The latest YouGov tracker shows just 22% of Britons believe Sir Keir Starmer is doing well as Prime Minister; 70% say he is doing badly. The figure is the joint-lowest of his premiership and represents a five-point fall on the April reading. Among 2024 Labour voters, 51% now say Starmer is doing a bad job. The composite of pre-election polling shows Reform leading in the mid-to-high 20s, the Conservatives at 21%, Labour at 19% and the Greens at 13%. The ratings are the worst going into a UK national vote since the Conservative collapse of 1997.

Dive deeper
An approval rating of 22% three days before a national vote is structurally incompatible with retaining electoral coalitions intact. The 51% figure for 2024 Labour voters is the more politically corrosive number: the parliamentary party will read Thursday’s results through the prism of who held their own coalition and who didn’t. The Burnham, Rayner and Streeting camps are all polling internally on counterfactual leadership scenarios; the briefing war from Friday morning will be intense. The 1997 comparison is misleading in one important respect: the Major government had a clear winning successor in Labour. The 2026 collapse has no obvious beneficiary.

Petrol Set to Pass Through to 175p as Forecourt Margins Collapse

The RAC told reporters on Monday that UK pump prices are likely to pass through Brent’s $114 level over the next 7–10 days, lifting average unleaded prices from current 168p towards 175p and diesel above 210p. Forecourt operators are absorbing some of the increase; independent station margins are reportedly negative on diesel sales. Cumulative additional household fuel costs since the war began now exceed £310 per car for average-mileage drivers. The increase comes during election week; Reform UK and the Conservatives are using it in final-week campaign messaging.

Dive deeper
The pass-through timing is the political danger: a 175p headline in the Friday morning newspapers, immediately after Thursday’s polls close, would dominate the post-election narrative regardless of the seat results. The Treasury cannot intervene meaningfully in three days; a fuel-duty cut would require parliamentary approval and would breach the fiscal rules without offsetting measures. The cumulative £310 figure is the campaign’s most powerful retail fact; it lands particularly heavily in the rural and shire constituencies where Reform is making its sharpest gains. Labour’s defensive line that the war is global and exogenous has limited purchase against a number consumers see at the pump every week.

Bank Holiday Monday — Final Quiet Day Before Three-Day Sprint

The early May bank holiday on Monday produced the campaign’s first quiet day in three weeks. Parliament remains in recess; Sir Keir Starmer made no public appearances; Kemi Badenoch held a closed-door strategy meeting with shadow cabinet colleagues. Reform UK leader Nigel Farage was filmed at Clacton for a final retail event. Final-stretch advertising spending across all four main parties is reported to have been front-loaded into the weekend. The Met Office forecasts overcast conditions across most of England for Thursday’s polling day.

Dive deeper
Bank holiday Mondays are typically a campaign trough by design; the parties prefer to keep media attention low when no announcements are scheduled. The contrast between Starmer’s near-total visibility and Farage’s saturation coverage at Clacton matters more than the individual events: the final 72 hours of broadcast will be shaped by whoever generates content. The Met Office forecast of showers across most of England is consequential: turnout typically falls 2–4 percentage points on wet polling days, and lower turnout disproportionately costs incumbent parties whose voters are less motivated. Combined with the fuel-price story, the structural setup for Thursday remains the worst possible for Labour.
One To Read

‘Misplaced Euphoria’: Markets Are Sleepwalking Into a Recession Amid Iran War Oil Shock

CNBC · The clearest framing of the macro consequences of today’s Brent move — how a sustained $110+ regime feeds through to consumer spending, household savings, and corporate margins, and why the equity market may still be underestimating the recession probability heading into the second half.
☼

Morning Briefing

Sunday 3 May 2026 — 08:11 BST

What It Means For You

  • Trump confirmed overnight that he is reviewing Iran’s 14-point plan but warned of renewed war if Tehran “misbehaves”. He “can’t imagine” the proposal will prove acceptable. Brent is locked at $110, Gulf shipping at a standstill, and the diplomatic window is narrowing rather than opening. Pump prices remain at 165–170p heading into the bank holiday Monday and polling day Thursday.
  • Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon killed 41 people in 24 hours, the highest toll since the April truce was extended. Approximately 50 Hezbollah-linked sites were destroyed; an Iranian military official said a renewed war with the United States remains “a possibility”. The Lebanon track, until recently the region’s only stable element, is now visibly fraying.
  • Today’s Sunday papers carry the final pre-election polls. Reform leads consistently in the mid-to-high 20s; Labour’s national share is stuck at 18–19%. With four days to local elections and Parliament in recess, the campaign has narrowed to doorsteps and broadcast set-pieces. The bank holiday weekend is the last quiet stretch before Thursday’s verdict.

Iran War — Day 64. The war started 28 February 2026. Trump warns of war if Iran “misbehaves”; reviewing 14-point plan but unconvinced. Israeli strikes kill 41 in southern Lebanon overnight. Iranian military official says renewed war with US “a possibility”. Forty-eight ships turned away by US blockade in 20 days. Brent settled at $109.96. Gilts close week at 4.96%. Four days to local elections; Sunday papers carry final polls.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump Warns of War if Iran “Misbehaves” While Reviewing 14-Point Plan

Speaking to reporters as he boarded Air Force One in Florida on Saturday evening, President Trump said he would “soon be reviewing the plan Iran has just sent” but explicitly warned of renewed war if Tehran “misbehaves”. He told the press pool he “can’t imagine” the proposal would be acceptable, citing Iran’s failure to pay “a big enough price” for its conduct over four decades. The remarks confirm what officials have indicated for 48 hours: Washington is unmoved by the structure of the offer.

Dive deeper
Trump’s “misbehave” framing is significant because it shifts the threshold for renewed strikes from a specific Iranian provocation to a generalised judgement call held by the President. That ambiguity is itself a form of pressure: Tehran cannot calibrate its conduct against a clear redline. The reference to “47 years” signals that Trump views the negotiation as part of a longer ledger going back to 1979, not just the current war. Iran’s 14-point document was always going to struggle without nuclear concessions; Trump’s overnight remarks confirm there is no diplomatic ladder back from the current impasse, only a wider war if either side takes the wrong step.

Israeli Strikes Kill 41 in Lebanon — Worst 24-Hour Toll Since Truce Extension

Israeli forces struck approximately 50 Hezbollah-linked sites across southern Lebanon overnight, killing 41 people in a 24-hour period according to Lebanon’s Ministry of Health. Strikes hit Siddiqine, Bint Jbeil and Al Smaaiyah in the Tyre district. The intensity marks the most serious breach of the April ceasefire, which was extended into mid-May only a fortnight ago. Hezbollah confirmed it had targeted Israeli soldiers and vehicles in retaliatory operations.

Dive deeper
The Lebanon track has functioned as the region’s sole stable element since 17 April. A 41-death day — with most fatalities reported as civilian — ends that classification. Prime Minister Salam’s decoupling strategy, which treated Lebanon as separate from the wider US-Iran war, is now under direct strain. Expect a French-led protest at the UN Security Council and renewed European pressure on Tel Aviv. The wider concern is that escalation in Lebanon could activate the Iranian retaliation Tehran has so far held in reserve, undoing 11 weeks of strategic patience and reigniting the multi-front war Trump claimed to have ended.

Tehran: Renewed War With US “a Possibility” as Talks Stall

An Iranian military official told state media on Sunday morning that a renewed war with the United States remains “a possibility” as peace talks stall. The statement aligns with Trump’s overnight warning and confirms both capitals are publicly preparing their populations for the diplomatic track to fail. Tehran insists the 14-point plan is its final offer; Washington has not formally responded. The IRGC has reportedly placed naval assets on heightened readiness in the strait.

Dive deeper
Public escalation rhetoric on both sides on the same weekend is the clearest sign yet that the diplomatic track has reached its terminus. Iran’s military framing, rather than a foreign-ministry response, is deliberate: it signals that the IRGC’s view now carries equal weight to Pezeshkian’s civilian government. In any wider escalation, the IRGC controls the strait, the missile forces and the regional proxies; the Foreign Ministry’s diminishing visibility is itself a leading indicator. The bank holiday weekend is genuinely dangerous: any IRGC action against US Navy vessels, intentional or not, would trigger response protocols that politicians may struggle to contain.

Forty-Eight Ships Turned Away in 20 Days as Hormuz Blockade Tightens

The US Navy has now redirected 48 vessels from Iranian ports over the past 20 days, with three forced back in the past 20 hours alone. CENTCOM confirmed no shipping is being permitted into or out of Iranian ports. Approximately 20,000 mariners remain stranded on 2,000 ships in the Gulf as supplies dwindle and rotation collapses. Lloyd’s of London continues to maintain its war-risk classification, keeping insurance premiums prohibitive for commercial traffic.

Dive deeper
A redirection rate of more than two ships a day represents a comprehensive blockade rather than a screening operation. The mariner crisis is becoming a parallel humanitarian story; many crews are from developing countries with limited consular capacity in the Gulf. Even a partial diplomatic resolution would not restore commercial shipping immediately because the war-risk insurance architecture takes weeks to recalibrate. The blockade has become self-reinforcing: as it tightens, Iran’s revenue collapses; as Iran’s revenue collapses, Tehran’s incentive to escalate grows; as escalation risks rise, war-risk premiums climb further.

Day 64 — Brent Locked at $110, Diplomacy at Its Furthest Reach

Brent crude closed Friday at $109.96 after a week of $107–111 trading and is unlikely to find a settling level until Tuesday’s European open. The market has now absorbed Iran’s 14-point submission, Trump’s scepticism, and the overnight Lebanon escalation without breaking range, suggesting traders see no diplomatic catalyst. Goldman Sachs maintains its $115 three-month forecast. The IEA’s strategic reserve coordination remains in “final stages” with no announced release date.

Dive deeper
Sixty-four days of war and the oil market has settled into a structural new normal at $110, with $126 the recent ceiling and $107 the floor. That trading range is itself the diplomatic verdict: markets price not what governments say but what they expect to happen. A genuine breakthrough would have produced a $10–15 drop in the past 48 hours; that drop has not arrived. For UK consumers, the implication is that pump prices of 165–170p are now the baseline rather than a temporary spike. The strategic reserve release, when it comes, can shave perhaps $8–10 off prices for thirty days but cannot replace the volume normally moving through Hormuz.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Sunday Papers Carry Final Polls — Reform Leads, Labour Stuck at 19%

Today’s Sunday papers carry the final pre-election polls. Reform UK leads consistently in the mid-to-high 20s, with Opinium showing the party at 27%, the Conservatives at 21%, Labour at 20% and the Greens at 13%. The composite of late-campaign surveys puts Labour’s national share at 18–19%, the same band it has held for three weeks. The polls confirm a four-cornered contest unlike any in modern British political history.

Dive deeper
A national share of 19% applied to local-election arithmetic still produces catastrophic seat losses for Labour because the party is defending a 2022 mid-cycle peak. The Conservative recovery to 21% in some surveys complicates the narrative: it suggests Reform’s ceiling may be lower than feared, but does nothing to help Labour. The Green Party at 13–16% — depending on pollster — is now a structural feature of the centre-left vote rather than a transient protest. The final polls are the last chance for either Labour or the Conservatives to argue tactical voting; from Monday onwards, the campaign is set.

Four Days to Polling — Reform Projected to Take 67 Councils

With four days to polling, Reform UK is projected to take control of 67 councils from a starting position of zero. Labour is forecast to fall from 92 to 16 council majorities. Sunderland, Wakefield, Thurrock and Barnsley are all expected to flip from Labour to Reform; Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk are forecast to flip from no-overall-control or Conservative to Reform. Forty-seven councils in total are projected to change hands — the largest churn since 1995.

Dive deeper
A jump from zero councils to 67 has no modern parallel; the closest analogue is the SDP-Liberal Alliance breakthrough of the early 1980s, which subsequently collapsed back. The councils projected to flip are Labour’s industrial heartland — Sunderland, Wakefield, Barnsley — held for generations rather than swing territory. Losing them would represent structural realignment rather than a bad night. The Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk shifts are arguably more politically significant: they convert Reform from a protest insurgency into a party that runs services, sets council tax and writes planning policy. That changes the conversation about Reform’s readiness for a Westminster role.

Burnham Excluded From Succession — Rayner-Streeting Race Now Open

Andy Burnham has been effectively excluded from the Labour leadership succession because securing a parliamentary seat would take too long. The race has narrowed to Angela Rayner and Wes Streeting. Streeting has reportedly secured backing from more than 81 Labour MPs — above the rule-book threshold to trigger a contest. Rayner remains the preferred choice of the membership and the unions. The two represent different ideological paths: Streeting the centrist professional, Rayner the union-backed left.

Dive deeper
The exclusion of Burnham — consistently the strongest hypothetical Labour leader in private polling — is the most revealing detail. The party has chosen speed over strength, signalling that the parliamentary party considers the post-election crisis too urgent to wait for a by-election to manufacture a Burnham seat. The Streeting-Rayner choice mirrors the 2010 Miliband contest: Ed (left, union-backed) versus David (centrist, professional). The membership chose left; the parliamentary party regretted it. Whether the parliamentary party has the discipline to deliver a different outcome this time is the central question of the coming weeks.

Gilts Close Week at 4.96% — Bank Holiday Tuesday Risk Looms

Ten-year gilt yields closed Friday at 4.96%, completing a pullback from Tuesday’s 5.09% peak. The retracement reflects the Bank of England hold, the Iranian proposal and reduced bank-holiday volumes rather than any structural improvement in the fiscal outlook. Pill’s dissent for a 25 basis-point hike remains the policy story. Markets reopen on Tuesday morning to whatever has happened over the bank holiday weekend — a more dangerous setup than usual.

Dive deeper
Closing below 5% removes the immediate pension-fund stress trigger but does not resolve the underlying fragility. Gilts have tested 5% four times in ten days and broken through twice; each test weakens the resistance. Tuesday’s open is the genuine risk window: if the Sunday papers produce a poll below Labour’s 18% baseline, or if Trump rejects the 14-point proposal over the weekend, gilts will gap through 5% before London desks have caught up. Pill’s lone dissent matters because it gives markets a hawkish anchor: if the inflation print or oil moves the wrong way, his minority view becomes the baseline expectation overnight.

Bank Holiday Weekend — Petrol at 168p as Voters Approach Polling Day

The early May bank holiday falls on Monday. Parliament is in recess; no political events are scheduled. UK petrol prices remain at 165–170p, with diesel above 200p at mainstream forecourts and 220p at motorway services. The Met Office forecasts overcast conditions with showers across most of England on Thursday. The combination of high pump prices, low turnout weather and an angry electorate is the worst possible setup for an incumbent government.

Dive deeper
Polling-day weather has been the silent variable in every projection. Rain typically suppresses turnout by 2–4 percentage points, and lower turnout disproportionately hurts incumbents whose voters are less motivated. Reform’s base, by contrast, is anger-driven — less weather-sensitive than enthusiasm-driven Labour or Green coalitions. If turnout drops to 30%, the headline projection numbers are likely to understate Reform’s gains rather than overstate them. The cumulative additional fuel cost since the war began now exceeds £260 per car. That figure, multiplied across 22 million households, is the single most powerful campaign fact of the election — and no government policy can change it in four days.
One To Read

Trump Warns of War if Iran ‘Misbehaves’ as Tehran Submits 14-Point Plan

The National · The most complete account of Trump’s overnight warning, the 14-point plan’s specifics, and why both Washington and Tehran are publicly preparing their populations for the diplomatic track to fail. Essential weekend reading before the markets reopen on Tuesday.
☼

Morning Briefing

Saturday 3 May 2026 — 08:00 BST

What It Means For You

  • Iran has submitted a 14-point response to the US proposal to end the war — more detailed than previous offers, but Washington remains unimpressed. Trump is unhappy it does not address the nuclear programme. Brent closed the week at $110, up 4.5% — still 40% above pre-war levels. The bank holiday weekend begins with oil markets open and diplomacy stalled.
  • Ukraine’s General Staff has formally confirmed the destruction of two Su-57 stealth fighters and one Su-34 at Shagol airfield, 1,700km inside Russia. Zelensky said Ukrainian strikes have inflicted $7 billion in losses on Russia’s oil sector since January, reducing processing volumes to their lowest level since 2009 — down 12% from 2025.
  • Four days to local elections. Tomorrow’s Sunday papers carry the final polls. Projections: Labour loses 1,850 seats, Reform gains 1,300+. Sunderland forecast to flip to Reform. The reshuffle is pencilled in for May 11. The leadership succession — Rayner vs Streeting — is already being briefed. The only question is whether Thursday’s result is bad or catastrophic.

Iran War — Day 64. The war started 28 February 2026. Iran submits 14-point response; US unimpressed. Brent closes week at $110, up 4.5%. Su-57 destruction confirmed. Zelensky: $7bn losses inflicted on Russian oil sector. Processing volumes at 2009 lows. Gilts at 4.96%. Four days to local elections. Sunday papers carry final polls. Bank holiday weekend.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Submits 14-Point Response to US — Washington Remains Unimpressed

↻ Thursday: “updated proposal” forwarded → Friday: full 14-point document revealed

Iran has submitted a formal 14-point response to the American proposal to end the war, transmitted through Pakistani mediators. The document is more detailed than previous offers but retains the core structure Washington has already rejected: reopen the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for lifting the US blockade, with nuclear negotiations deferred until after hostilities end. An unnamed US official told NPR that Trump was “unhappy” with the proposal because it contained no provisions on Iran’s nuclear programme. The US appears cool on the terms.

Dive deeper
A 14-point document sounds like progress — it suggests Iran is engaging seriously with the specifics rather than offering vague frameworks. But detail without movement on the nuclear question is just a more elaborate version of the same impasse. The US position has been consistent since Rubio’s “unacceptable” rejection: no deal without nuclear concessions. Iran’s position has been equally consistent: nuclear sovereignty is non-negotiable. Fourteen points of agreement on everything except the one thing that matters is not a deal. It is a negotiating position that demonstrates engagement while avoiding compromise.

Su-57 Destruction Confirmed — Ukraine’s General Staff Verifies Shagol Strike

Ukraine’s General Staff and Unmanned Systems Forces commander Robert “Magyar” Brovdi formally confirmed the destruction of two Su-57 fifth-generation stealth fighters and one Su-34 fighter-bomber at Shagol airfield in Chelyabinsk — 1,700km from the Ukrainian border. The confirmation came after satellite imagery and open-source analysis corroborated the initial reports. The Su-57 is Russia’s most advanced combat aircraft, with an estimated unit cost of $35–50 million and fewer than 30 in service.

Dive deeper
Confirmation matters because it moves this from claimed success to verified achievement. Two Su-57s represents a significant proportion of Russia’s operational fleet — possibly 7–10% of the total. More importantly, the strike demonstrates that Ukraine can reach targets Russia considered safe. Chelyabinsk is in the Urals — the industrial heartland where Russia’s defence production is concentrated. If airfields 1,700km from the front are vulnerable, so are the factories supplying the war effort. The strategic implications extend well beyond two aircraft.

Zelensky: Ukrainian Strikes Have Cost Russia $7 Billion in Oil Losses Since January

President Zelensky said Friday that Ukraine’s long-range strikes have inflicted at least $7 billion in cumulative losses on Russia’s oil sector since the start of 2026. The campaign has reduced Russian oil processing volumes to their lowest level since 2009 — down 12% from 2025. The Tuapse refinery alone has been struck four times. Zelensky also announced a major military reform to expand the Unmanned Systems Forces, reflecting the growing centrality of drone warfare to Ukraine’s strategy.

Dive deeper
The $7 billion figure is substantial but needs context: Russia’s oil revenue in 2025 was approximately $180 billion. A $7 billion loss over four months represents roughly 15% of quarterly revenue — painful but not crippling, especially with elevated global prices partially compensating. The 12% drop in processing capacity is more strategically significant: it forces Russia to export crude rather than refined products, which carries lower margins. The military reform announcement signals that Zelensky views the drone campaign as a permanent capability, not a temporary escalation. Building an institutional structure around it suggests Ukraine plans to sustain and expand deep strikes indefinitely.

Brent Closes Week at $110 — Up 4.5% Despite Iran’s Proposal

Brent crude finished the week at $109.96, up approximately 4.5% over five sessions despite Iran’s 14-point submission. The weekly gain reflects the market’s assessment that the proposal is unlikely to produce a breakthrough. Oil reached $126 at its peak earlier in the week before Iran’s offer triggered a brief 3% drop — most of which was subsequently recovered. The $107–111 trading range has held through the week, suggesting the market has found an uneasy equilibrium between blockade risk and diplomatic hope.

Dive deeper
The bank holiday weekend is significant for oil markets because European and UK political attention is absent while crude trades 24/7 in Asian and US markets. Any diplomatic development — a US rejection of Iran’s 14 points, a naval incident in the strait, or an unexpected breakthrough — would move prices before London opens on Tuesday. For UK petrol prices, the current $110 level translates to roughly £1.78–1.82 per litre at the pump. That is the price voters will be paying when they walk to polling stations on Thursday. No government policy can change it in four days.

20,000 Mariners Still Stranded — Shipping Industry Demands International Action

Approximately 20,000 seafarers remain stranded on 2,000 ships in the Persian Gulf as the Hormuz crisis enters its third month. Maritime unions have escalated their calls for international intervention, arguing that crew welfare is deteriorating as supplies dwindle and rotation schedules collapse. Lloyd’s of London maintains its war-risk classification for the strait, which keeps insurance premiums prohibitively high for commercial traffic. The restriction of shipments by more than 90% continues to ripple through global supply chains, with agricultural input costs now rising alongside energy.

Dive deeper
The stranded mariner crisis has been overshadowed by the oil price and diplomatic stories, but it is a growing humanitarian problem. Many of these crews are from developing countries with limited consular capacity in the Gulf. Ships carrying perishable cargo have already written off their loads. The insurance dimension is critical: even if Iran and the US agreed to partially reopen the strait tomorrow, the Lloyd’s war-risk classification would keep premiums at crisis levels until a sustained period of safe transit is demonstrated. The infrastructure of normal shipping — insurance, routing, port scheduling — has been disrupted in ways that will take months to restore regardless of the diplomatic outcome.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Four Days to Local Elections — Sunday Papers Carry the Final Polls

The 7 May local elections are four days away. Tomorrow’s Sunday papers will carry the final pre-election polls — the last data points before voters decide. Current projections: Labour loses approximately 1,850 of the 2,557 seats it is defending (50–74%). Reform gains over 1,300 seats from a base of just 3, potentially reaching 2,342 councillors. The Greens gain around 500. The Conservatives also lose roughly 600 seats. Sunderland, Wakefield, Thurrock, and Barnsley are all projected to flip from Labour to Reform control.

Dive deeper
The projected numbers are historic in scale. Reform going from 3 councillors to over 2,300 would be the most dramatic local election surge by any party since Labour’s post-war breakthrough in municipal government. The councils projected to flip — Sunderland, Wakefield, Barnsley — are not swing territory. They are Labour’s industrial heartland, held for generations. Losing them would not just be a bad election night; it would represent a structural realignment of English politics. The Sunday papers know this, which is why the final polls will dominate the bank holiday weekend conversation and set the narrative for the last four days of campaigning.

Gilts Below 5% Heading into the Weekend — 4.96% on Friday Close

↻ Tuesday: 5.09% peak → Friday close: 4.96%

Ten-year gilt yields closed the week at 4.96%, completing a pullback from Tuesday’s 5.09% peak. The BOE hold, Iran’s proposal, and reduced trading volumes have all contributed to the easing. The week saw extraordinary volatility — a 13-basis-point range between the low (4.96%) and the high (5.09%) — but the direction into the weekend is calmer. Whether it lasts depends on two things: the US response to Iran’s 14 points and the Sunday polls. If both go badly, Tuesday’s open could be volatile.

Dive deeper
Closing below 5% is psychologically important — it removes the immediate pension fund stress trigger and gives the Treasury some breathing room heading into the election. But the calm is fragile. Gilts have tested 5% four times in the past ten days and broken through it twice. Each test weakens the resistance level. The bank holiday weekend is the most dangerous period because the gilt market reopens on Tuesday morning to whatever happened while Parliament was closed. If the Sunday polls show Labour below 15% nationally, or if the US formally rejects Iran’s proposal over the weekend, the gilt market will open straight through 5% again.

Reshuffle Confirmed for 11 May — Scope Depends on Thursday Night

The post-election reshuffle remains scheduled for Monday 11 May. Government sources have outlined three scenarios based on the election result: a targeted reshuffle (Reeves replaced, one or two other changes) if losses are “expected bad”; a wholesale Cabinet reset if flagship councils like Manchester or Birmingham fall; or no reshuffle at all if the result somehow exceeds expectations — a scenario no one in Downing Street is currently planning for.

Dive deeper
The fact that Downing Street is briefing three reshuffle scenarios rather than one tells you everything about the government’s confidence level. Planning for “expected bad” as the best case is not a position of strength. The third scenario — no reshuffle if results exceed expectations — is included for completeness rather than plausibility; it exists to avoid the accusation that the PM has already conceded defeat. The real decision is between scenarios one and two, and that decision will be made between 2am and 6am on Friday 8 May as the counts come in. By Saturday morning, everyone will know whether Starmer is reshuffling his Cabinet or fighting for his leadership.

Labour Leadership Succession Now Openly Discussed — Rayner vs Streeting

The Labour leadership succession race is no longer being whispered — it is being published. British Brief reported Rayner and Streeting as the two frontrunners, with Burnham excluded because securing a parliamentary seat would take too long. The New Statesman asked “Will Labour survive 2026?” in a video analysis. Multiple outlets report that senior Labour figures have moved from “if” to “when” in their private conversations about Starmer’s future. The local elections are now less a test of policy and more a trigger mechanism.

Dive deeper
Open succession reporting before an election is unusual and damaging. It signals to voters that the party itself does not expect its leader to survive the result — which becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Why would a wavering Labour voter turn out for a leader whose own party is publicly planning to replace? The Rayner-Streeting choice represents a genuine ideological fork: Rayner appeals to the union base and the traditional left; Streeting appeals to centrist professionals and swing voters concerned about Reform. Burnham’s exclusion is the most significant detail — he consistently polls as Labour’s strongest hypothetical leader, but the party cannot afford to wait for him. Speed over strength. That tells you how urgent they think the situation is.

Bank Holiday Weekend — The Quiet Before Thursday

The early May bank holiday falls on Monday. Parliament is in recess. No political events are scheduled. The weekend is defined by what is absent: no PMQs, no Commons votes, no ministerial statements. What remains is oil markets trading around the clock, the Sunday papers setting the final narrative, and voters spending their last quiet weekend before the country delivers its verdict. Petrol is £1.78 per litre. The weather forecast for Thursday is overcast with showers across most of England.

Dive deeper
The weather matters more than it should. Rain on polling day historically suppresses turnout by 2–4 percentage points, and lower turnout disproportionately hurts Labour, whose voter base is less likely to turn out in difficult conditions. Reform’s voters, by contrast, are motivated by anger — a powerful driver that is less affected by weather. If turnout drops to 30% (typical for low-engagement local elections in poor weather), the results could be even more dramatic than the polls suggest, because the polls assume a higher turnout baseline. The bank holiday weekend is calm. What follows it is not.
One To Read

Iran Submits 14-Point Response to US Proposal to End War

NPR · The most detailed account of Iran’s formal 14-point response — what it contains, what it avoids, and why Washington is not convinced. Essential context for understanding whether the bank holiday weekend produces a breakthrough or another rejection.
☼

Morning Briefing

Saturday 2 May 2026 — 07:55 BST

What It Means For You

  • Trump told reporters on Friday the United States might be “better off not making a deal at all” with Iran — pulling Brent back from session highs and pricing out hopes of a near-term diplomatic break. Pump prices stay elevated through the bank holiday weekend and into polling day. The dual blockade enters its third week with no diplomatic catalyst on the horizon.
  • Israeli strikes overnight on three south Lebanon villages killed nine people, including two children and five women — the worst breach of the Israel–Hezbollah ceasefire since it took effect. The political damage in Beirut and Brussels is significant; expect renewed European pressure on Tel Aviv this weekend and a French protest at the Security Council.
  • Five days to local elections. Labour’s national share holds at 19%; final pre-election Sunday polls land tomorrow. Markets are closed for the bank holiday Monday and Parliament is in recess — meaning three days of campaigning with no government counter-narrative available before voters cast ballots on Thursday.

Iran War — Day 63. The war started 28 February 2026. Trump signals US could be “better off” without a deal; talks at impasse. Iran proposal forwarded via Pakistan; no formal US response. Israeli strikes on three south Lebanon villages kill nine, including two children. Iran-linked hackers threaten US Marine Corps personnel and families. Ukraine offers long-term ceasefire after Putin floats Victory Day truce. Brent settled $108.20. Five days to local elections.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump: US “Better Off Without a Deal” — Talks at Impasse on Day 63

President Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Friday that the United States could be “better off not making a deal at all” with Iran, the bluntest rejection yet of Tehran’s revised peace proposal forwarded via Pakistan. Retired General Mark Kimmitt warned the deadlock could persist for months as Iran’s pressure tactics fail to shift Washington. Brent gave up its session gains and settled at $108.20 in late trade.

Dive deeper
Trump’s “better off” framing is more than rhetoric: it sets the conditions for an indefinite economic siege rather than a negotiated exit. Iran has run through three diplomatic intermediaries — Oman, Qatar and now Pakistan — without finding a formula that bridges the enrichment gap. Each rejection compounds Tehran’s domestic pressure to escalate kinetically rather than concede. The market read is simple: with no diplomatic catalyst on the horizon, oil has a floor in the high $100s for as long as the strait stays effectively closed and the broader US–Iran posture remains adversarial.

Israeli Strikes Kill Nine in South Lebanon Villages — Ceasefire Fraying

Israeli airstrikes overnight on three south Lebanon villages killed nine people, including two children and five women, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry. It is the worst incident since the Israel–Hezbollah ceasefire took effect almost two weeks ago. Lebanese Prime Minister Salam called the strikes “a flagrant violation”; UNIFIL has launched an investigation. France is preparing a formal protest at the Security Council.

Dive deeper
The Lebanon track was supposed to be the one stable element of an unstable region. Striking civilian villages — not Hezbollah positions — risks unwinding two months of careful diplomacy and pulls Beirut back into the orbit of the wider US–Iran confrontation. Israel maintains the targets were Hezbollah operatives; the demographics of the dead make that claim politically untenable in European capitals. Macron is expected to telephone Netanyahu over the weekend. If the ceasefire collapses, Lebanese refugee flows resume and the political cover for the dual blockade narrows further.

Iran-Linked Hackers Threaten US Marines and Families — Cyber Front Opens

US Marine Corps personnel, civilian employees and their immediate families received threatening text messages on Friday from a hacking group affiliated with Iran, Pentagon officials confirmed. The threats are described as “unsubstantiated” but specific enough to unsettle recipients. The group used personal data presumably obtained through prior breaches of US contractor systems. The Pentagon has activated victim-support protocols.

Dive deeper
Direct threats against named US service personnel and their families represent an escalation Tehran has previously avoided. Targeting individuals rather than systems signals that Iran’s asymmetric playbook is now extending beyond infrastructure attacks into psychological warfare against the military community. The political impact in Washington is disproportionate: members of Congress whose constituents include affected service families will demand visible retaliation. Expect a renewed push for kinetic counter-cyber operations or expanded sanctions on Iranian intelligence entities by mid-week. The cyber front is now an integrated dimension of the war, not a peripheral one.

Ukraine Counters Putin’s Victory Day Truce With Long-Term Ceasefire Bid

President Zelensky responded to Putin’s suggestion of a Victory Day truce by proposing a “long-term, reliable, guaranteed” ceasefire instead. Speaking overnight, Zelensky said Kyiv needs clarity on whether the Kremlin offer covers “a few hours of security for a parade in Moscow, or something more.” Russia continues to demand Ukrainian withdrawal from parts of Donbas as a precondition. Polymarket prices a 2026 ceasefire at 25.5%.

Dive deeper
Putin’s Victory Day gesture is a deliberate political trap: accept and Ukraine validates the parade narrative; refuse and Russia frames Kyiv as the obstacle to peace. Zelensky’s counter-offer of a long-term ceasefire neutralises both lines and shifts the burden back to Moscow. The structural gap remains the territorial question — Russia wants Donetsk and Luhansk completed; Ukraine accepts only a freezing of current lines. With Western diplomatic bandwidth largely consumed by the Iran crisis, neither party faces sustained pressure to compromise. Expect symbolic gestures around 9 May rather than substantive movement on the underlying war.

Brent Settles at $108.20 — Bank Holiday Weekend Tests Range

Brent crude settled at $108.20 in Friday’s late session after Trump’s “better off” remarks erased the proposal-driven relief rally. The contract has held a $107–111 corridor for three sessions, suggesting traders are pricing neither resolution nor the worst-case escalation. Most European markets are closed Monday for the May Day holiday. Asian opening trade on Sunday evening sets the tone before the FTSE returns on Tuesday morning.

Dive deeper
A bank holiday weekend with elevated geopolitical risk is the worst possible combination for thin markets. Liquidity is reduced and any weekend news — an Iran statement, a Hormuz incident, a public US response to the proposal — produces outsized moves at Asian open. Goldman Sachs maintains its $115 three-month forecast; Morgan Stanley has lifted its Q3 view to $112. The IEA strategic reserve drawdown is now in its fifth week and approaching the sustainability limit. For UK consumers, the implication is direct: forecourt prices stay above 175p through polling day with no domestic mechanism able to lower them.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Pill: “Prompt but Modest Hike” Needed to Prevent Inflation Persistence

BOE Chief Economist Huw Pill expanded on his dissent overnight, arguing that a “prompt but modest hike in Bank Rate will help mitigate upside risks to price stability stemming from a re-emergence of intrinsic inflation persistence.” He noted that Gulf events have left the energy outlook “elevated and more uncertain” and warned that waiting too long risks allowing second-round effects to embed in wage settlements and price expectations. CPI rose to 3.3% in March; the BOE expects it to climb further as fuel costs feed through.

Dive deeper
Pill’s language is carefully chosen. “Intrinsic inflation persistence” is the BOE’s term for inflation that becomes self-sustaining — where businesses raise prices because they expect costs to keep rising, regardless of whether they actually do. Once that psychology takes hold, monetary policy has to work much harder to break it. Pill is essentially arguing that a 25-basis-point hike now is cheaper than a 75-basis-point hike later. The rest of the committee disagrees — for now. If May’s inflation print exceeds 4%, Pill’s position will look prescient and the June meeting becomes the most consequential since the LDI crisis.

Gilts Below 5% for First Time in a Week — 4.98% This Morning

↻ Monday: 5.02% → Tuesday: 5.09% peak → Thursday: 5.00% → This morning: 4.98%

Ten-year gilt yields have dropped below 5% for the first time since Monday, settling at 4.98% this morning. The combination of the BOE hold, Iran’s updated proposal, and reduced trading volumes ahead of the bank holiday weekend has taken pressure off the market. The move below 5% is symbolically important — it removes the immediate pension fund stress that the breach had triggered — but yields remain elevated well above the 4.60–4.70% range that prevailed before the Mandelson crisis intensified.

Dive deeper
Below 5% is better than above 5%, but the trajectory matters more than the level. If yields drift lower through the bank holiday weekend and into next week, it suggests the market is pricing out the worst political scenarios. If they bounce back above 5% on Monday — which any Hormuz escalation or local election polling shock could trigger — the week’s relief becomes a dead cat bounce. The “Starmer premium” on UK borrowing costs will not truly dissipate until either the political picture stabilises or a leadership transition provides clarity that markets can price.

Five Days to Local Elections — Final Weekend of Campaigning Begins

The 7 May local elections are five days away. Labour enters the final weekend at 19% in national polls, with Reform at 28% and projections of 1,850 lost seats. The bank holiday weekend means no parliamentary business, no PMQs, and no opportunities for Starmer to generate alternative coverage. Oil trades 24/7. Any Hormuz development over the weekend will set the tone for the final campaign days. Labour’s ground teams report that the cost-of-living crisis — driven by fuel prices — is the dominant doorstep issue, not Mandelson.

Dive deeper
The doorstep feedback is telling: voters are not asking about Mandelson or the Privileges Committee vote. They are asking why petrol costs £1.78 per litre and why their energy bills have gone up again. That is simultaneously better and worse for Labour. Better because it means the political scandal has not cut through to ordinary voters. Worse because the economic pain is something the government cannot fix — it is driven by a war in the Gulf that Britain has no control over. Starmer’s problem is not that voters blame him personally for the oil price. It is that they blame the government for not doing anything about it — and they are right that the government has no tools to deploy.

Reshuffle Machinery Assembled — Monday 11 May, Scope Depends on Scale of Losses

The post-election reshuffle remains pencilled in for Monday 11 May. Government sources say the scope will be determined by the scale of local election losses: a bad night triggers a limited reshuffle with Reeves as the headline casualty; a catastrophic night — losing Birmingham, Manchester, or Leeds — could trigger a wholesale reset of the Cabinet. GB News described it as Starmer’s “final roll of the dice.” Guido Fawkes reported that the “scale of backbench anger at the locals result” will dictate whether the reshuffle satisfies MPs or accelerates the leadership question.

Dive deeper
The reshuffle logic has a fundamental flaw: it assumes that changing personnel resolves a crisis caused by external economic forces. Sacking Reeves does not lower the price of oil. Replacing Cabinet ministers does not reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The gesture might buy Starmer a week of “new direction” coverage, but if petrol is still £1.78 on May 12, the new Chancellor faces exactly the same impossible fiscal maths. The real question is not who replaces Reeves but whether anyone in Labour believes the party’s problems are solvable under Starmer — and the Rayner-Streeting succession reporting suggests an increasing number do not.

Bank Holiday Weekend — Markets Open, Parliament Closed, Voters Deciding

The early May bank holiday falls on Monday 4 May. Parliament is in recess until after the elections. For three days, there is no political news cycle — just oil prices, weekend newspapers, and voters making up their minds. The Sunday papers will carry the final pre-election polls. If Labour’s national share has fallen further from 19%, the narrative entering polling day will be existential rather than difficult. The weather forecast for the bank holiday is rain across most of England — which historically suppresses turnout, a factor that typically hurts Labour more than its competitors.

Dive deeper
Bank holiday weekends before elections are unusually consequential because they are the last period when voters are not working and have time to pay attention. The Sunday papers — which still drive the Monday broadcast agenda — will run final polls and pre-election analysis. If those polls show Labour below 19%, the front pages will frame the election as a verdict on Starmer rather than a local contest. That framing matters because it gives permission to Labour MPs who are already inclined toward a leadership challenge to cite the result as evidence. The weekend is quiet on the surface. Underneath, it is the last opportunity for the narrative to be set before the count.
One To Read

Bank Rate Maintained at 3.75% — April 2026 Monetary Policy Summary and Minutes

Bank of England · The full minutes of the MPC’s April meeting — including Pill’s dissent rationale, the committee’s war-era forecasts, and the inflation outlook. The primary source for understanding what the Bank actually said versus what the headlines reported. Essential before the bank holiday weekend.
☽

Evening Briefing

Friday 1 May 2026 — 18:04 BST

What It Means For You

  • Trump told reporters he is “not satisfied” with Iran’s revised proposal delivered through Pakistan, paring the day’s relief rally as Brent slipped further to $107.05. The dual blockade enters its third week with shipping volumes through Hormuz still around 90% below normal. Pump prices are set to remain elevated through the bank holiday weekend and into next week’s vote.
  • The FTSE closed up 1.3% at 8,285 — its strongest session in weeks — but ten-year gilts remain near 5% and the Bank of England’s wartime forecasts warn inflation will rise further before easing. Mortgage offers being reissued today reflect those higher yields; pipelines for two-year fixes have been repriced upward again this afternoon.
  • The final round of MRP modelling now confirms a Labour wipeout next Thursday, with the party defending 2,557 council seats and projected to lose between half and three-quarters of them. Rayner and Streeting are openly cited as Starmer’s potential successors. Six days remain; the bank holiday provides no political cover.

Iran War — Day 62. The war started 28 February 2026. Trump rejects revised Iran proposal as inadequate; Brent pares earlier 3% drop to close at $107.05. War Powers 60-day clock expires today; Senator Murphy schedules Tuesday floor vote. Ukrainian drones strike Tuapse refinery for fourth time. Russia launches 210 drones overnight; Ternopil and Kharkiv hit. Hezbollah–Israel ceasefire extended to mid-May despite daily violations. FTSE closes +1.3% at 8,285; gilts edge to 4.99%. Six days to local elections.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump “Not Satisfied” With Iran Proposal — Brent Pares Relief Rally

↻ Midday: Brent down 3% on proposal news → Late afternoon: Trump rejection pulls oil back from session lows

President Trump told reporters this afternoon he is “not satisfied” with Iran’s revised peace proposal delivered through Pakistani mediators, adding he is “not sure we’re going to get to a deal.” Brent crude pared its midday gains, settling at $107.05 after touching session lows below $106. The remarks confirm the structural gap on uranium enrichment remains the binding constraint, irrespective of what Tehran offers on Hormuz transit protocols.

Dive deeper
Trump’s framing — “not sure we’re going to get to a deal” — is calibrated to preserve blockade leverage rather than slam the door entirely. Markets read it correctly: oil retraced but did not snap back to yesterday’s levels. Traders still attach a non-zero probability to eventual settlement. The pattern of Iranian proposals followed by US rejections has now repeated four times since the conditional ceasefire began on 8 April. Each rejection narrows the diplomatic space and increases pressure for kinetic escalation. Pakistan’s mediation channel remains open but its credibility is wearing thin.

War Powers 60-Day Clock Expires — Senate Vote Scheduled Tuesday

The 60-day War Powers Resolution window for Operation Epic Fury expires today without congressional authorisation. Senator Chris Murphy will introduce a privileged resolution on Tuesday demanding US forces withdraw from hostilities with Iran absent a formal declaration of war. Six Republicans have indicated support; Senate passage now appears likely. The President has signalled an immediate veto, and the House remains aligned with the administration, making override mathematically improbable.

Dive deeper
The expiry triggers a constitutional confrontation the White House had hoped to defer. A Senate-passed resolution does not directly compel withdrawal, but it legalises Democratic litigation challenging continued operations and energises floor opposition to the $1.5 trillion war supplemental. Each successive 60-day window will force a fresh Senate vote, locking the campaign into a rolling political dispute through the midterms. The administration was privately lobbying for a Friday Iranian climbdown to defuse Tuesday’s floor calendar — an outcome today’s rejection has now made considerably less likely.

Ukrainian Drones Hit Tuapse Refinery for Fourth Time — Fires Reignite

Ukrainian long-range drones struck Russia’s Tuapse oil refinery on the Black Sea coast for the fourth time in a fortnight, reigniting fires at facilities only partially restored from the previous attack. Local authorities declared a state of emergency. Tuapse processes around 240,000 barrels per day; sustained outage there is now eroding Russian wholesale fuel supply rather than just export revenue. Kyiv’s targeting cycle is tightening as Western strike packages continue to arrive.

Dive deeper
A fourth strike in two weeks signals a campaign rather than opportunism. Tuapse is one of three Black Sea refineries Kyiv has methodically targeted since March, and the cumulative damage is now affecting Russian domestic petrol availability. Moscow’s air-defence allocation has been pulled south, easing pressure on Ukrainian energy infrastructure in the centre and west. The strategy is attritional: force Russia to choose between protecting front-line assets and protecting the economic engine. Ukrainian officials confirm strike volumes will increase through May as new long-range capability reaches operational units.

Russia Launches 210 Drones Overnight — Ternopil and Kharkiv Struck

Russia launched 210 attack drones at Ukraine overnight, of which roughly 140 were Iranian-design Shaheds. Air Defence Forces shot down 190. The western city of Ternopil came under attack on Friday afternoon, with explosions reported across the city; earlier, Russian forces struck four Kharkiv petrol stations and a fifth in Chuhuiv, injuring two. Odesa residential blocks were also hit. Moscow has now sustained record-volume nightly drone barrages for nine consecutive nights.

Dive deeper
Russian drone production has reached the volumes anticipated by Ukrainian intelligence in February: 200–300 nightly launches are now standard rather than exceptional. The 90% interception rate is impressive but expensive — air-defence missile stocks are being consumed faster than Western supply can replace them. Ternopil’s targeting deep in western Ukraine signals that no city is now beyond reach. The shift in Russian targeting from infrastructure to fuel retail and residential blocks reflects a Kremlin calculation that civilian disruption is now the more useful coercive lever.

Hezbollah–Israel Ceasefire Extended to Mid-May Despite Daily Violations

Hezbollah and Israel have accused each other of near-daily violations of the Trump-brokered Lebanon ceasefire, which was extended this morning until mid-May. Lebanese Prime Minister Salam called for restraint; Israeli officials said the response would be “asymmetric and sustained.” Three Israeli forward operating bases were targeted overnight in coordinated rocket attacks the IDF said it intercepted in full. The truce is technically holding but with rising friction at the northern frontier.

Dive deeper
The mid-May extension is shorter than the previous 30-day rollovers used through March. Trimming the window suggests both sides expect the ceasefire to be tested again before it expires, and neither wants to commit to a longer stand-down without movement on the broader US–Iran track. The risk of a Lebanon-front reactivation is the highest it has been since Operation Epic Fury began on 28 February. Renewed war here would draw Israeli forces north and complicate Washington’s Hormuz posture at the worst possible moment.

UK UK Domestic Politics

FTSE Closes +1.3% at 8,285 — Gilts Hold Just Below Five Per Cent

↻ Open: 8,210 → Close: 8,285, led by energy and financials

The FTSE 100 closed up 1.3% at 8,285, its strongest session in weeks, led by energy stocks benefiting from elevated oil prices and financials responding to the prospect of further rate increases later this year. Ten-year gilt yields edged down to 4.99% but remain at the level that triggered emergency briefings last week. Sterling firmed to $1.2965. The mood is cautiously improved without recovering pre-war territory.

Dive deeper
The rally is relief, not recovery. Gilts at 4.99% are still around 30 basis points above pre-crisis levels — the “Starmer premium” on UK borrowing costs has not disappeared, only stabilised at an elevated level. The 1.3% FTSE gain reflects a market that had been pricing worse outcomes: a hawkish BOE surprise, an immediate Hormuz escalation, neither materialised. Positions unwound. The week ahead is binary: if Iran’s proposal collapses outright, the rally reverses and gilts test 5.10% again; if it survives the weekend, equity gains may extend.

Pollsters Confirm “Labour Wipeout” on 7 May — Worst-Ever Local Result Likely

The final round of major MRP modelling published this afternoon confirms the worst-case projections for Labour next Thursday. Of the 5,066 English council seats being contested, Labour is defending 2,557 and is projected to lose between 50% and 74% of them. Reform UK and the Greens are forecast as the principal beneficiaries. Several analysts have described the result, if borne out, as Labour’s worst local performance in modern history.

Dive deeper
The 50–74% loss range is extraordinary because it assumes a turnout collapse Labour cannot mitigate in five days. The Greens’ surge in urban university wards reflects an anti-war pivot that ties petrol prices, climate policy and the Iran campaign into a single message Labour cannot rebut without alienating its remaining base. Reform’s consolidation around 28% confirms it has absorbed both former Conservative and protest-Labour voters into a single coalition. The threshold for triggering a leadership challenge in earnest is widely cited as 1,500 lost seats; current modelling clears that comfortably.

Rayner–Streeting Succession Race Now Discussed in Print

British Brief and Bloomberg both reported today that a Labour leadership succession contest is increasingly openly discussed, with Angela Rayner and Wes Streeting positioned as the two leading candidates if Starmer is forced out after the elections. Andy Burnham, often cited as Labour’s strongest national campaigner, is considered “too far away” to wait for — he would need a Westminster seat first. Senior Labour figures have moved from “if” to “when” in private conversations.

Dive deeper
The Rayner–Streeting choice is a choice about which threat the party fears more. Rayner represents continuity with the union base and the soft left; Streeting represents a pivot toward the centre and a more confrontational approach to Reform. Burnham’s exclusion is structural rather than personal: a leadership contest cannot wait the months required for him to secure a Westminster seat. LabourList polling suggests Starmer would defeat Streeting head-to-head but lose to Rayner. The fact that named comparisons are now in print before polling day tells you where parliamentary confidence in the Prime Minister stands.

Mandelson–Epstein Scandal Continues to Drag on Labour Vote Share

The Mandelson–Epstein vetting scandal continues to weigh on Labour’s closing campaign, cited by analysts as a principal driver of the 2026 collapse alongside the Iran-driven cost-of-living squeeze. The Foreign Affairs Committee’s invitation to Robbins remains outstanding. No further documents have been disclosed since the Easter recess, but commentators expect the issue to return to prominence after polling day regardless of the result.

Dive deeper
The scandal’s endurance through six weeks of major geopolitical news is itself the story. Most political controversies decay rapidly under news-cycle pressure, but this one has retained salience because it speaks to a more fundamental concern about establishment judgement. Reform’s campaign material this week ties Mandelson explicitly to Starmer’s electoral troubles, a rhetorical move pollsters say is now landing. The Robbins question is still live: if he agrees to testify in May, the parliamentary recess ends with another crisis point an embattled Prime Minister can ill afford.

Six Days to Polling — Bank Holiday Weekend Without Parliamentary Cover

Polling day is six days away. Parliament has risen for the bank holiday recess; MPs do not return until 13 May. Labour enters the long weekend with poll ratings around 19%, Reform at 28%, projections of 1,500–1,900 lost council seats, a Chancellor whose sacking is being briefed and a leadership succession race openly discussed in the press. The bank holiday provides no political cover — oil trades around the clock and any Hormuz development will dominate.

Dive deeper
The six-day countdown is a test of whether anything can change the trajectory. Iran’s rejected proposal narrows the variables: only an unexpected Hormuz reopening or a major Russian escalation could shift the news agenda decisively, and neither is imminent. Labour strategists are now resigned to a poor result; the question is whether it is bad enough to trigger the formal leadership machinery already being assembled. Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds council outcomes are the bellwethers. If any of those fall, the parliamentary arithmetic for a confidence move changes overnight.
One To Read

Iran War: What’s Happening as Trump Signals Possible Attacks

Al Jazeera · A definitive read on where the diplomatic track stands after Trump’s “not satisfied” rejection of Tehran’s revised proposal, why the Pakistan channel may be running out of credibility, and what kinetic options Washington still holds in reserve.
☽

Evening Briefing

Thursday 1 May 2026 — 18:00 BST

What It Means For You

  • Iran has submitted an updated peace proposal via Pakistani mediators, sending Brent down nearly 3% to $107. But Trump told American oil executives the blockade could continue for “months,” and the UAE declared Iran “cannot be trusted” over Hormuz. The proposal offers a flicker of hope — the market reaction suggests traders are not convinced it will hold.
  • Yesterday’s Bank of England hold at 3.75% has settled markets — gilts rallied back to 5.00% and the FTSE jumped 1.3%. But the BOE’s first war-era forecasts warn inflation is “likely to be higher later this year,” and Chief Economist Huw Pill — the sole dissenter — told Bloomberg rates “need to rise more promptly.” Markets still price in three quarter-point hikes this year.
  • The only concrete deliverable from the state visit: Trump removed whiskey tariffs “in honour of the King and Queen.” No movement on steel or automotive. Meanwhile, British Brief reports a Labour leadership succession race is emerging — Rayner vs Streeting — with Burnham considered too far away to wait for. Six days to local elections.

Iran War — Day 62. The war started 28 February 2026. Iran submits updated proposal; Brent drops 3% to $107. UAE: Iran “cannot be trusted.” Trump tells oil execs blockade could last “months.” 20,000 mariners stranded. BOE held at 3.75% (8–1); Pill dissents, wants hike. Gilts rally to 5.00%. FTSE up 1.3%. Trump removes whiskey tariffs. CNN: Charles “charmed America.” Labour leadership race: Rayner vs Streeting. Six days to elections.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Sends Updated Peace Proposal — Brent Drops 3% but Scepticism Runs Deep

Pakistani mediators confirmed receipt of an updated Iranian proposal to end the war, sending Brent crude down nearly 3% to $107.14 — the sharpest single-day drop in weeks. The proposal’s terms have not been made public, but it follows the framework Iran outlined last week: reopen Hormuz in exchange for lifting the US blockade, with nuclear talks deferred. The market reaction was immediate but cautious — oil swung wildly through the session as traders weighed the signal against Trump’s repeated insistence that no deal is possible without nuclear concessions.

Dive deeper
The 3% drop looks significant in isolation but needs context: Brent hit $126 at its peak last week and remains above $107 — still 40% higher than pre-war levels. The market is pricing a narrow possibility that the updated proposal contains something new, not a genuine expectation of resolution. Iran has submitted proposals before, and each has been rejected on the same grounds: nuclear preconditions. Unless the updated version makes a meaningful concession on the nuclear question, the pattern will repeat. The price movement is hope, not conviction.

UAE: Iran “Cannot Be Trusted” Over Hormuz — Trump Tells Oil Execs Blockade Could Last “Months”

The United Arab Emirates declared that Iran “cannot be trusted” over the Strait of Hormuz, the strongest public statement from a Gulf state since the crisis began. Separately, Trump told American oil executives that the US naval blockade could continue for “months,” signalling no urgency to reach a deal. The dual messages — from the region’s most commercially exposed state and from the US president — undercut the optimism generated by Iran’s updated proposal.

Dive deeper
The UAE’s intervention is significant because Abu Dhabi has historically maintained back-channel relations with Tehran and avoided public confrontation. Declaring Iran untrustworthy suggests the UAE has concluded that the current Iranian leadership will not honour any agreement on strait access — which means Gulf states may begin developing permanent alternative shipping routes rather than waiting for Hormuz to normalise. Trump’s “months” comment to oil executives is equally telling: it suggests the administration views elevated oil prices as an acceptable cost of maintaining pressure, particularly given that US domestic production partially insulates America from the worst effects.

20,000 Mariners and 2,000 Ships Stranded in the Persian Gulf

Approximately 20,000 seafarers and 2,000 commercial vessels remain stranded in the Persian Gulf due to the Hormuz closure, according to shipping industry data. The restriction of shipments by more than 90% has raised energy and agricultural input costs worldwide. Brent hit $126 at its peak last week before pulling back on Iran’s latest proposal. The human cost of the blockade — crews stuck on vessels for weeks with dwindling supplies and no timeline for resolution — is receiving increasing attention from maritime unions and the International Maritime Organization.

Dive deeper
The stranded mariner crisis is a slow-building humanitarian problem that the geopolitical coverage has largely overlooked. Many of these crews are from the Philippines, India, and Bangladesh — countries with limited diplomatic leverage to secure their release. The ships themselves represent billions of dollars in cargo that is deteriorating — perishable goods have already been written off, and insured losses are mounting. Lloyd’s of London has classified the Hormuz corridor as a war-risk zone, which means insurance premiums for any vessel attempting transit are prohibitively expensive even if the strait were partially reopened.

Trump Removes Whiskey Tariffs “In Honour of the King” — Only Trade Win From State Visit

President Trump announced the removal of tariffs and trade restrictions on whiskey, citing the state visit: “In honour of the King and Queen… I will be removing the tariffs and restrictions on whiskey,” he wrote on Truth Social, pointing to trade ties between Scotland and Kentucky’s bourbon industry. It is the only concrete trade deliverable from the four-day visit. No movement was announced on steel, automotive, or broader tariff negotiations that Starmer’s team had prioritised.

Dive deeper
Whiskey tariffs are symbolically useful and commercially modest. The UK whisky industry will welcome it, but the sectors that matter most to British manufacturing — steel and automotive — remain subject to US tariffs that are costing jobs. Starmer needed headline trade wins to justify the visit’s diplomatic capital. What he got was a gesture on spirits. CNN’s post-visit assessment that Charles “charmed America and avoided pitfalls” is accurate — the King did his job. But royal charm does not translate into tariff relief, and the gap between the pageantry and the outcome is exactly the kind of disconnect that fuels the “not in control” narrative heading into the local elections.

CNN: Charles “Charmed America and Avoided Pitfalls” — State Visit Assessed

CNN’s post-visit analysis concluded that King Charles “charmed America and avoided pitfalls” across four days that took him from the White House to Ground Zero to Shenandoah National Park. The Congress address drew bipartisan ovations. The 1814 joke became the defining moment. The Arlington wreath-laying provided a dignified close. Commercially, the visit produced one trade concession (whiskey) and no military commitments. Diplomatically, it generated warmth without substance — which is perhaps the most a constitutional monarch can deliver when the underlying political relationship is strained.

Dive deeper
The state visit will be remembered as a personal triumph for Charles and a diplomatic holding action for Britain. The King proved he can command a room, disarm a difficult host, and project the relationship as stronger than it is. But projecting strength and possessing it are different things, and the week after the visit will test whether any of the goodwill translates into policy movement. Trump’s whiskey gesture suggests he enjoyed the company but is not prepared to make concessions that cost him anything. The “special relationship” remains special in ceremony and transactional in practice.

UK UK Domestic Politics

BOE Holds at 3.75% (8–1) — Pill Dissents, Warns Rates Must Rise “More Promptly”

↻ Yesterday: decision announced, hold as expected → Today: Pill’s dissent dominates, Bloomberg interview published

The Bank of England held rates at 3.75% yesterday in an 8–1 vote, with Chief Economist Huw Pill the sole dissenter pushing for an immediate hike. Today, Pill told Bloomberg that rates “need to rise more promptly” to contain inflation expectations, arguing the committee’s cautious approach risks allowing second-round effects to embed. The BOE’s accompanying forecasts — its first since the war began — warned inflation is “likely to be higher later this year as the effects of higher energy prices pass through.” Markets still price nearly three quarter-point hikes in 2026.

Dive deeper
Pill’s public dissent matters more than the hold itself. A Chief Economist openly arguing for tighter policy while his colleagues hold creates a credibility tension that markets will test. If the May inflation print comes in above 4% — which the oil trajectory makes likely — Pill’s position will be vindicated and the pressure on Bailey to hike in June becomes acute. The BOE’s description of its stance as a “reasonable place” and its readiness to “act as necessary” are carefully calibrated to keep options open without committing. But “reasonable place” at 3.75% with oil above $107 and inflation heading toward 4% is a phrase that could age badly.

Gilts Rally to 5.00% — FTSE Jumps 1.3% as BOE Hold Calms Markets

↻ This morning: 5.12% → This evening: 5.00%

Ten-year gilt yields fell back to 5.00% — down from this morning’s 5.12% — as the BOE’s hold and Iran’s updated proposal provided a double dose of calming signals. The FTSE 100 jumped 1.3%, its best session in weeks, led by energy stocks benefiting from the still-elevated oil price and financials responding to the prospect of rate hikes later in the year. Sterling edged up to $1.2960. The mood is cautiously improved, though yields remain at levels that would have been considered crisis territory two months ago.

Dive deeper
The rally is relief, not recovery. Gilts at 5.00% are still 30 basis points above pre-crisis levels, which means the “Starmer premium” on UK borrowing costs has not disappeared — it has stabilised at an elevated level. The FTSE’s 1.3% gain reflects a market that had been pricing in worse outcomes: a hawkish BOE surprise or an immediate Hormuz escalation. Neither materialised, so positions unwound. The question for next week is whether Iran’s proposal goes anywhere. If it collapses — as every previous proposal has — the rally reverses and the gilt market tests 5.12% again.

Labour Leadership Race Emerging — Rayner vs Streeting, Burnham “Too Far Away”

British Brief reports that a Labour leadership succession race is quietly taking shape, with Angela Rayner and Wes Streeting positioned as the two leading candidates should Starmer be forced out after the local elections. Andy Burnham, the Greater Manchester Mayor often cited as Labour’s strongest potential leader, is considered “too far away” to wait for — he would need to secure a parliamentary seat before running, which adds months to any transition timeline. The report suggests senior Labour figures are moving from “if” to “when” in their private conversations.

Dive deeper
The Rayner-Streeting dynamic tells you something about where the party thinks its problem is. Rayner represents continuity with the left and the union base; Streeting represents a pivot toward the centre and a more confrontational approach to Reform. The choice between them is a choice about which threat Labour fears more: losing its base to apathy or losing the centre to Farage. Burnham’s exclusion is telling — he polls well nationally but the parliamentary party cannot afford a prolonged interregnum while he finds a seat. Speed matters more than popularity if the local elections trigger a crisis. The fact that this conversation is happening in named publications before polling day tells you everything about where Labour’s confidence in Starmer stands.

Reshuffle Plans Firm — Monday 11 May Pencilled In, Reeves “Most Likely Casualty”

Government sources have confirmed that a post-election reshuffle is planned for Monday 11 May — four days after polling. The scope will depend on the scale of the losses, but Rachel Reeves is described as the “most likely casualty.” GB News characterised the reshuffle as Starmer’s “final roll of the dice” to save his premiership. The strategy is clear: absorb backbench anger by offering a high-profile scalp while reframing the government’s narrative. Whether that works depends on whether the backbenchers want a new Chancellor or a new Prime Minister.

Dive deeper
Sacking a Chancellor during a gilt crisis is high-risk. Reeves’s removal would generate a 24-hour news cycle of “government in chaos” headlines, and the bond market would need to assess her successor immediately. If the replacement is seen as credible — someone with fiscal discipline credentials — yields might stabilise. If not, the leadership change achieves the opposite of its intent: it adds political risk to an already fragile gilt market. The irony is that Reeves is being set up as the fall guy for an oil shock that no Chancellor could have prevented. The economic problems are external; the political response is internal. Starmer is treating a geopolitical crisis as a personnel problem.

Six Days to Local Elections — Bank Holiday Weekend With No Cover

The local elections on 7 May are six days away. Parliament has risen for the bank holiday recess. Labour enters the weekend with polls at 19%, Reform at 28%, projections of 1,850 lost seats, a Chancellor whose sacking is being briefed, a leadership succession race in print, and a BOE warning that inflation will get worse before it gets better. The bank holiday provides no political cover — oil trades 24/7, and any Hormuz development over the weekend will dominate the final campaign days.

Dive deeper
The six-day countdown is now a test of whether anything can change the trajectory. Iran’s updated proposal is the only variable that could shift the mood — if it leads to even partial Hormuz reopening, oil drops, petrol prices stabilise, and the economic backdrop improves. But Trump’s “months” comment and the UAE’s distrust of Tehran suggest that is unlikely before May 7. Labour’s strategists are resigned to a bad result; the question is whether it is bad enough to trigger the leadership machinery that is already being assembled. The answer depends on Birmingham, Manchester, and Leeds — if any of those councils fall, the arithmetic changes overnight.
One To Read

King Charles Charms America and Avoids Pitfalls During His Whirlwind US Tour

CNN · The definitive post-visit assessment. Traces the four days from South Portico to Shenandoah, explains what the 1814 joke achieved diplomatically, and asks the question Downing Street does not want to answer: what did Britain actually get?
☼

Morning Briefing

Friday 1 May 2026 — 08:03 BST

What It Means For You

  • Iran’s revised peace proposal arrived through Islamabad overnight, the first substantive counter-offer since the Monday rejection. Brent eased $2 to $113.20 on the news but the structural impairment of Hormuz remains unchanged. Pump prices breached 175p this morning; forecourts are now updating signage weekly rather than monthly.
  • The Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee convenes an unscheduled meeting at 07:30 on pension-fund stress as gilt yields hold at 5.08%. The Treasury’s fiscal headroom continues to evaporate; the OBR’s 12 May update is now the central macro event of the second quarter. Mortgage offers in the pipeline are being repriced again this morning.
  • Six days remain before the local elections. YouGov’s final MRP confirms Bloomberg’s 1,550-seat Reform projection, with Labour at a 1997 low. Number 10 has narrowed the reshuffle to Cooper or Miliband for Chancellor; the Sunday 10 May decision is now the most consequential personnel call of this parliament.

Iran War — Day 62. The war started 28 February 2026. Iran delivers revised peace proposal via Islamabad overnight; Pakistani Foreign Minister Dar confirms transmission to Washington. Brent eases to $113.20. War Powers 60-day deadline expires today; Senator Murphy schedules Tuesday floor vote. Hezbollah strikes three Israeli forward operating bases; Lebanon ceasefire frays. UAE raises output 480,000 b/d unilaterally; Aramco cuts Asian prices. Bank’s FPC convenes emergency meeting on LDI stress at 07:30. Charles returns from US without tariff deal. Pump prices breach 175p. Six days to local elections.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Delivers Revised Peace Proposal via Pakistan Overnight

Tehran delivered its revised peace proposal through Islamabad shortly after 01:00 BST, the first substantive Iranian counter-offer since Secretary Rubio rejected the previous version on Monday. Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar confirmed receipt and said the document had been transmitted to Washington. The text reportedly addresses Hormuz transit protocols and IAEA verification frameworks but stops short of conceding the suspension of uranium enrichment that Rubio has set as the precondition for sanctions relief.

Dive deeper
Tehran’s proposal reportedly offers a six-month suspension of mine deployment and a calibrated reopening of Hormuz transit in exchange for the lifting of the US naval blockade. The IAEA verification language is unchanged from the December position, which Washington rejected as inadequate. The proposal arrives with the 60-day War Powers deadline expiring today, deliberately timed to maximise leverage with sceptical senators. Pakistan’s mediation has narrowed the diplomatic gap considerably; the question is whether the Khamenei–Rubio gulf on enrichment is now bridgeable. European chancelleries are pushing Washington to engage on the text rather than dismiss it outright.

Brent Eases to $113 as Markets Price Iranian Counter-Offer

Brent crude eased to $113.20 in Asian trading, down from yesterday’s $115.40 close, after confirmation that Iran’s revised proposal had been delivered through Islamabad. WTI followed to $101.80. The move pares two days of sustained pressure but remains firmly above the pre-war range. Lloyd’s of London continued to refuse Persian Gulf hull cover at quotable rates; physical Hormuz transits remain at 12% of normal capacity.

Dive deeper
The $2 retracement is modest by recent standards and signals scepticism rather than relief. Forward curves continue to price Brent above $108 through year-end, and the implied volatility on three-month options remains close to last week’s multi-year peak. The Pakistan delivery itself does not unlock supply; only Trump’s response will. Goldman Sachs maintained its three-month forecast at $115 last night, citing the structural impairment of Hormuz capacity even in the event of a deal. UK forecourt prices remain on track to breach 180p by mid-May.

Trump’s 60-Day War Powers Window Expires; Senate Schedules Vote

The 60-day War Powers Resolution window for Operation Epic Fury expires today without congressional authorisation. Senator Chris Murphy will introduce a privileged resolution next Tuesday demanding the President withdraw US forces from hostilities with Iran absent a declaration of war. Six Republicans have indicated they will support the resolution; passage now appears likely in the Senate, though the President has signalled an immediate veto.

Dive deeper
The 60-day deadline triggers a constitutional confrontation that the White House had hoped to defer. A Senate-passed resolution does not directly compel withdrawal but legalises Democratic litigation challenging continued operations and energises floor opposition to the $1.5 trillion war budget. The House remains firmly aligned with the President; a clean veto override is mathematically improbable. The political effect is to lock the Iran campaign into an ongoing constitutional dispute through the midterms, with each successive 60-day extension triggering a fresh Senate vote. The administration is privately lobbying for a Friday Iranian climbdown to defuse the resolution before the Tuesday floor calendar.

Hezbollah Strikes Three Israeli Posts; Lebanon Ceasefire Frays

Hezbollah launched coordinated rocket attacks on three Israeli forward operating positions across the northern frontier last night, the most significant exchange since the November ceasefire. The IDF reported intercepts of all incoming rounds and responded with strikes on six suspected launch sites in southern Lebanon. Lebanese Prime Minister Salam called for restraint; Netanyahu’s office said the response would be “asymmetric and sustained.”

Dive deeper
The Hezbollah salvo marks a deliberate decoupling of the Lebanon track from the broader US–Iran ceasefire, exactly the scenario Tehran has been signalling since Monday’s rejection. Three Israeli positions were targeted simultaneously, indicating a pre-planned operation rather than reactive harassment. The IDF’s response in southern Lebanon was constrained but firm; Salam’s government has hours rather than days to enforce a stand-down before the IDF widens the response set. A reactivated Lebanon front would draw Israeli forces north and complicate the US Hormuz position by reopening the broader regional conflict at the worst possible moment.

UAE Pumps Unilaterally as Saudi–Abu Dhabi Rift Deepens

The United Arab Emirates raised crude production by 480,000 barrels per day overnight in its first material output increase since quitting OPEC on Wednesday. Saudi Aramco responded by cutting May official selling prices to Asian buyers by $1.20 per barrel. The unilateral moves represent the most visible cartel fracture since Qatar’s departure in 2019. Brent’s overnight retracement reflected the new supply alongside the Iranian proposal.

Dive deeper
Abu Dhabi’s pump-and-undercut strategy is calibrated to capture market share from Iranian crude while the blockade holds. The 480,000-barrel increase represents roughly 16% of the UAE’s spare capacity and signals an intention to maintain elevated output for at least three months. Riyadh’s price cut is a defensive response to retain Asian volume rather than a coordinated cartel move. The fracturing dynamic is structural: the GCC consensus that priced oil for half a century has now visibly broken, and recombining it after this episode will be politically and operationally complex.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Bank’s FPC Convenes Emergency Meeting on LDI Pension Stress

The Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee convenes an unscheduled meeting at 07:30 to assess pension-fund collateral pressures after gilt yields settled at 5.10% yesterday. Pension fund LDI mark-to-market losses are estimated to have approached £45 billion this week. The Bank’s Prudential Regulation Authority has surveyed the largest 23 pension funds; preliminary returns suggest collateral buffers remain adequate but margin pressures are accelerating.

Dive deeper
Pension funds rebuilt LDI buffers after the 2022 mini-Budget crisis, but the speed of the current move is testing them. At 5.10%, ten-year gilt yields are 13 basis points above the level that triggered the 2022 collapse; sustained moves towards 5.25% would force unwinds the Bank would feel obliged to intervene against. The FPC has the option to expand its existing repo facility, signal additional liquidity provision, or remain in monitor mode. Markets will read the post-meeting communication closely; silence would itself be a hawkish signal that no intervention is imminent.

Reshuffle Drama Hardens — Cooper or Miliband for Treasury

Number 10’s reshuffle planning has narrowed to a binary choice between Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper and former Energy Secretary Ed Miliband for the Chancellorship, the Financial Times reports. The decision will be taken on Sunday 10 May, the day before the Monday reshuffle. Reeves remains in post but is no longer attending strategy meetings. Sterling weakened a quarter-cent on the reporting; gilt yields steepened modestly.

Dive deeper
Cooper offers Home Office discipline and a known track record on detail; Miliband offers political weight, a climate-spending pivot, and direct conflict with Treasury orthodoxy. Bond markets have signalled a 25-basis-point spread widening on a Miliband choice. The deeper problem is that neither swap solves the fiscal arithmetic — both inherit the same OBR headroom evaporation due 12 May. Starmer’s choice is therefore a signalling decision: Cooper for continuity, Miliband for activism. The leadership team’s behaviour suggests they have not yet decided which signal they need to send to backbenchers.

Charles Returns from US Visit Without Tariff Concession

King Charles III and Queen Camilla landed at Heathrow shortly after 22:30 last night, concluding the four-day state visit. The communiqué issued from the Embassy yesterday morning produced no specific commitments on the 25% UK steel tariff, the Hormuz security architecture, or the post-war reconstruction framework. Downing Street briefed that the visit “consolidated the personal relationship”; the Telegraph called it “warmth without substance.”

Dive deeper
The Sovereign visit has historically been a vehicle for converting personal relationships into policy concessions, but the Trump administration’s negotiating style frustrates that mechanism. Tuesday’s Congress address generated bipartisan applause but produced no specific UK–US framework on the war. The lack of a tariff outcome is the most concrete loss; UK Steel had briefed expectations of at minimum a deferral before the locals. The political question now is whether Downing Street can convert the goodwill into a Trump phone-call commitment on Hormuz transit protections; the early evidence is that the visit was its own reward.

Reform Projected to Gain 1,550 Seats; Six Days to Polls

YouGov’s final pre-election multilevel regression model, released overnight, confirms Bloomberg’s projection of approximately 1,550 Reform UK gains across the 2,557 council seats Labour is defending. Reform now leads in 124 of the 142 contested councils. Labour is projected at 12% nationally, the lowest since 1997. The Greens are forecast to take 540 seats, predominantly in urban university wards; the Conservatives are expected to lose roughly 600.

Dive deeper
The MRP technique aggregates large samples to constituency-level forecasts and has historically been more accurate than headline polling at predicting local outcomes. The 1,550 projection is consistent with both the Bloomberg and Britain Elects models, removing residual ambiguity about scale. Reform’s ground operation has reached the point of converting national support into seat distribution, the variable that limited gains in 2024. For Starmer, the cliff-edge question is whether the post-election parliamentary arithmetic still allows him to govern; if Reform takes 1,500-plus seats and Labour loses control of more than 12 councils, internal challenge thresholds become mathematically plausible.

Pump Prices Breach 175p as Wholesale Costs Feed Through

Average unleaded petrol breached 175p per litre overnight, according to RAC data published this morning, up 4p in 48 hours and now within 6p of the all-time UK record. Diesel touched 188p; motorway services are charging above 215p at multiple sites. The Treasury has not signalled any pre-Budget duty rebate; Rachel Reeves’s office said only that the Chancellor was “monitoring the position closely.”

Dive deeper
The 175p threshold has historic political resonance: it was the level that triggered the 2022 fuel duty cut. The seven-to-ten-day wholesale-to-pump lag means yesterday’s $115 Brent close will appear at the pumps around 8 May, the day after polling. The RAC has warned that prices will reach 180p by mid-May without intervention, with diesel breaching 195p on the same path. Reform UK’s messaging on fuel duty cuts and an emergency VAT suspension is cutting through in post-industrial seats more sharply than any other cost-of-living theme. The Treasury has only ineffective levers.
One To Read

How Pakistan Became the Indispensable Mediator in the Iran–US Hormuz Standoff

Financial Times · A definitive account of how Islamabad — not Riyadh, not Doha — became the only conduit credible to both Tehran and Washington, and what that means for the proposal arriving in DC this morning. Read this to understand why a Pakistani-brokered text might succeed where Gulf-led efforts have failed.
☽

Evening Briefing

Thursday 30 April 2026 — 17:56 BST

What It Means For You

  • Brent pared from a $126 overnight peak to settle at $115.40 by London close, a $10 retracement as traders unwound speculative longs ahead of Iran’s revised proposal due via Pakistan tomorrow. The volatility itself is the story; pump prices remain on track to push above £1.85 a litre by mid-May whatever happens overnight. Forecourt margins are now tracking weekly, not monthly.
  • The Bank of England held at 3.75% as expected, with Huw Pill the lone dissenter for a hike. Bailey abandoned the single forecast for the first time, publishing three war scenarios with CPI peaking between 3.5% and above 6%. Mortgage offers in the pipeline are being repriced at higher rates this evening; two-year fixes now average 6.4%.
  • Yvette Cooper is being lined up as Reeves’s successor, with Labour’s soft Left pushing for Ed Miliband. Either appointment would mark a strategic reset days before polling. Bond markets are watching the personnel drama as closely as the macro data; gilts settled at 5.10% — the highest sustained level since the 2008 crisis.

Iran War — Day 61. The war started 28 February 2026. Brent pares from $126 overnight peak to $115.40 by close. Iran threatens “practical and unprecedented action” against blockade. Hegseth grilled six hours in Senate on $25bn war cost. Putin proposes 9 May Victory Day truce in 90-minute Trump call; Zelensky calls it “manipulation.” Ukraine drones strike Perm Krai oil depot. Bank of England holds 3.75% — 8–1 split, Pill dissents. Bailey publishes three war scenarios. Gilts settle 5.10%. Cooper tipped for Treasury. Seven days to local elections.

GEO Geopolitical

Brent Pares from $126 Peak to $115.40 as Traders Unwind

↻ Overnight peak: $126.10 → This morning: $124.20 → This evening: $115.40 (−7.1%)

Brent crude pared from its overnight $126.10 high to $115.40 by London close, the largest single-session retracement of the war. WTI followed, settling near $104. The reversal was driven by speculative-long unwinds ahead of Iran’s revised proposal, due to be delivered through Pakistan tomorrow. Physical supply was unchanged at 12% of normal Hormuz capacity; the move was financial, not fundamental.

Dive deeper
A $10 intraday retracement on no fundamental change underscores how thin the speculative book has become. The CFTC’s Commitment of Traders report on Friday will likely show the largest weekly long liquidation since the 2020 collapse. Forward curves still price Brent above $110 through year-end, and the implied volatility on three-month options closed at a multi-year peak. Banks are now quoting $145 as a three-standard-deviation tail event rather than a worst-case outlier. The Bank of England’s Bailey explicitly warned the committee cannot wait for evidence of second-round effects.

Iran Threatens “Practical and Unprecedented Action” Against Blockade

An unidentified senior Iranian security source told state-owned Press TV this afternoon that the US blockade would soon meet “practical and unprecedented action.” Trump responded by demanding Tehran “cry uncle” and confirmed the blockade would continue indefinitely. The exchange follows Tuesday’s rejection of Iran’s limited Hormuz-for-ports proposal and removes any ambiguity about the standoff.

Dive deeper
Iran’s threatened response options include mining additional Hormuz approaches, escalating drone strikes against US Navy assets, or attacks on Gulf oil infrastructure. Any kinetic move would push Brent above $130. The Pentagon raised force-protection levels at the Fifth Fleet’s Bahrain headquarters this afternoon, and US carrier groups are repositioning. The IRGC has historically signalled before acting; the “practical and unprecedented” phrasing is uncharacteristically specific. Tehran’s revised proposal, due via Islamabad tomorrow, may be the last off-ramp before the next escalation.

Hegseth Grilled Six Hours in Senate on $25 Billion War Cost

Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth faced a six-hour Senate Armed Services hearing this afternoon on Operation Epic Fury, two days after a similarly combative House session. Pentagon CFO Jules Hurst confirmed the 60-day war has cost $25 billion. Bipartisan senators questioned the $1.5 trillion budget request, the absence of a defined endgame, and the recent firings of senior commanders.

Dive deeper
The hearing exposed unusual Republican unease at an open-ended commitment with no Senate authorisation. The 60-day War Powers deadline expires next week and no resolution has been scheduled, raising the prospect of a constitutional confrontation between Congress and the White House. General Caine confirmed five additional carrier deployments have been authorised, taking US Navy presence in the Gulf and Indian Ocean to its highest level since 2003. The $1.5 trillion budget proposal now faces a markedly more sceptical Senate than the administration anticipated.

Putin Proposes 9 May Truce in 90-Minute Trump Call; Zelensky Rejects

Russian President Vladimir Putin proposed a one-day Ukraine ceasefire over the 9 May Victory Day parade in a 90-minute call with President Trump yesterday evening, Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov confirmed today. Trump publicly endorsed the proposal. President Zelensky rejected it as “manipulation,” demanding instead an unconditional 30-day ceasefire and accusing Moscow of seeking only to protect the parade.

Dive deeper
The Kremlin tied the Ukraine concession to potential Russian intercession on Iran, an explicit linkage Trump welcomed. For Kyiv, the proposal is a trap: accepting reinforces Putin’s pageantry; refusing risks Trump publicly aligning with Moscow on the optics. Zelensky’s framing — “we value human lives, not parades” — is designed for European audiences as much as American. The exchange is the first substantive Ukraine diplomatic moment since February and signals that Putin views Iran-driven Western distraction as a bargaining opportunity. European chancelleries are now coordinating a unified rejection.

Ukraine Drones Strike Russian Fuel Depot in Perm Krai

Satellite imagery confirmed at least two storage tanks ablaze at a Transneft oil pumping station in Russia’s Perm Krai overnight, the deepest strike of the war into Russian rear territory. Ukrainian drones also struck an explosives plant in Nizhny Novgorod and disabled two Russian helicopters in Voronezh region. Moscow acknowledged the Perm fire but said most drones were intercepted.

Dive deeper
Perm sits roughly 1,400 kilometres from Ukrainian lines, demonstrating a step change in drone range. The Transneft target is part of the Druzhba pipeline logistics network and its disruption ripples into Russian refining capacity. The strike came within 24 hours of Putin’s truce proposal, deliberately signalling that Kyiv will not grant Victory Day on Russian terms. Ukrainian campaigning against Russian energy infrastructure now compounds the Hormuz disruption for European refiners reliant on diversified crude flows. Kyiv is timing pressure to coincide with peak Western anxiety about oil prices.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Bank of England Holds at 3.75% — 8–1 Split, Pill Dissents

The Monetary Policy Committee voted eight to one to maintain Bank Rate at 3.75%, as all 62 economists polled by Reuters had expected. Chief Economist Huw Pill voted alone for a 25-basis-point increase to 4%, formalising the hawkish dissent that markets had positioned for. The decision came in line with consensus; the message in the accompanying Report was the news.

Dive deeper
Pill’s dissent is procedurally significant: it formalises the inflation hawks’ position on the committee and gives the next decision a hawkish drift. Markets now price a 30% probability of a June hike, up from 12% before the meeting. Pill is increasingly positioned as the obvious internal successor when Bailey’s term ends in 2028. The Treasury Select Committee has scheduled an emergency financial-stability session for Tuesday, and the Chancellor will appear before the committee separately on Wednesday to address the fiscal implications.

Bailey: “Most Difficult Combination” — Three Scenarios, CPI to 6%+

Governor Andrew Bailey abandoned the single central forecast for the first time, publishing three Iran-war scenarios in the April Monetary Policy Report. CPI peaks at 3.5% in the benign case, around 4.5% in the central path and above 6% in the adverse scenario. Bailey called it “the most difficult combination” the committee had faced.

Dive deeper
Scenario analysis is unprecedented for the MPC and signals the committee’s diminished forecasting confidence. Bailey explicitly warned that the Bank cannot wait for conclusive evidence of second-round wage effects before acting. The adverse 6%+ projection would be the highest UK inflation peak since the 2022 energy crisis and would imply real-wage compression of a magnitude the labour market has not absorbed before. Sterling fell on the publication as markets read the central case as more dovish than feared. The 2027 CPI path now stretches the Bank’s credibility further than at any point since independence.

Gilts Settle at 5.10% — Highest Sustained Level Since 2008

↻ This morning: 5.13% → This evening: 5.10% — the third consecutive close above 5.00%

Ten-year gilt yields settled at 5.10% by close, easing three basis points from the morning open but still the highest sustained level since the 2008 financial crisis. Pension fund collateral calls accelerated through the afternoon as LDI mark-to-market losses approached £45 billion. Sterling weakened to $1.2895; the FTSE 100 closed up 0.7% at 8,245.

Dive deeper
The 5% threshold has now flipped from ceiling to floor in three sessions, with the next reference point at 5.25%. The Office for Budget Responsibility has scheduled an urgent fiscal-sustainability update for 12 May; every additional percentage point on Bank Rate adds approximately £15 billion to annual debt-servicing costs. The OBR is expected to halve the Treasury’s remaining headroom in the update. Pension funds have rebuilt collateral buffers since 2022, but the speed of the move is testing them. The Bank’s Financial Policy Committee has called an unscheduled meeting for Friday morning.

Cooper Tipped to Replace Reeves — Soft Left Pushes for Miliband

Downing Street sources confirmed this afternoon that Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper is being lined up as Chancellor in the post-election reshuffle pencilled for 11 May. Labour’s soft-Left faction is pressing for Ed Miliband instead. Reeves is now openly being briefed against. Sterling weakened on the reshuffle reporting; bond yields steepened modestly.

Dive deeper
Cooper would bring Home Office discipline but no Treasury experience and faces immediate questioning over her stance on fiscal rules. Miliband’s appointment would signal a climate-spending pivot and is the option markets fear most: bond traders are flagging a 25-basis-point spread widening on a Miliband choice. The deeper problem for Starmer is that swapping Chancellors does not solve the underlying fiscal arithmetic, only reassigns responsibility. The personnel decision now interacts directly with the OBR’s 12 May headroom update, magnifying its market impact.

FTSE Climbs 0.7% After BoE Hold; Sterling Eases to $1.2895

The FTSE 100 rose 0.7% to close at 8,245 as the rate hold and the absence of immediate hawkish action steadied sentiment. Sterling slipped to $1.2895 against the dollar; EUR/GBP rose to 0.8918. The rally was concentrated in oil majors and defensives; banks underperformed as the forward rate path flattened. Mid-caps and housebuilders gained most from the small gilt-yield reprieve.

Dive deeper
The equity move masks an unusually narrow market: 60% of the FTSE’s gain came from Shell and BP alone, with the broader index essentially flat. Banks fell on flattening forward rates; housebuilders rallied on the gilt-yield retreat from this morning’s 5.13% peak. Sterling weakness reflects a relative-rates story versus the Federal Reserve, which is expected to cut twice more this year. The pound is now at its lowest level against the dollar since November and has lost 4% on the trade-weighted index over the past fortnight. Importers are passing the move through to consumer prices on a four-to-six-week lag.
One To Read

Trump Said His Blockade Would Cause Iran’s Oil Industry to ‘Explode’ This Week. Why That Won’t Happen

CNBC · An indispensable explainer on why the physical mechanics of Iran’s oil industry mean Trump’s blockade timetable cannot deliver the rapid collapse he is promising. Read this to understand why the standoff is likely to last months, not weeks — and what it means for oil prices, gilts, and the Bank of England’s next move.
☼

Morning Briefing

Thursday 30 April 2026 — 08:12 BST

What It Means For You

  • Brent peaked at $126 overnight before paring to $124.20 this morning — the highest intraday print since the war began. The UAE’s sudden withdrawal from OPEC has compounded the supply shock by removing the cartel’s most reliable spare-capacity holder. Pump prices are expected to push toward £1.92 a litre within a fortnight if Brent holds above $120.
  • The Bank of England decides at noon. A hold at 3.75% is unanimously expected, but the published forecasts will project CPI peaking at 6.2% in early 2027 under a worst-case oil scenario, with rates potentially rising to 5.25%. Gilts have already opened at 5.13% — a fresh post-LDI high. Mortgage offers in the pipeline are being repriced this morning.
  • Bloomberg’s 1,850-seat Labour loss projection has been picked up across the morning press. Westminster is now openly briefing that Reeves will be sacked on Monday 11 May. King Charles lays a wreath at Arlington today before flying home tonight; the four-day state visit ends with no announced trade deliverables.

Iran War — Day 61. The war started 28 February 2026. Brent peaks at $126 overnight, settling at $124.20. UAE quits OPEC; Trump welcomes the move. Pakistan to receive Iran’s revised peace proposal by Friday. Netanyahu adviser accuses Hezbollah of breaching the ceasefire. Bank of England decides at noon — CPI seen peaking at 6.2%. Gilts at 5.13%. Bloomberg: Labour to lose 1,850 council seats. Charles lays wreath at Arlington. Eight days to local elections.

GEO Geopolitical

UAE Quits OPEC — Trump Welcomes Move as Cartel Discipline Fractures

The United Arab Emirates announced its withdrawal from the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries overnight, becoming the first Gulf producer to leave the cartel since Qatar in 2019. President Trump publicly welcomed the move, calling it “long overdue.” The UAE holds approximately three million barrels per day of spare capacity — roughly half of OPEC’s total cushion — and its exit removes the bloc’s most credible swing producer. Saudi Arabia issued a terse statement noting only that quota arrangements would be revisited at the next ministerial meeting.

Dive deeper
The UAE’s exit is the most consequential structural shift in oil markets since Qatar’s departure, and it lands at the worst possible moment. With 13 million barrels of Iranian and Hormuz-trapped supply already offline, OPEC’s ability to coordinate a production response has been the only restraining factor on prices. Abu Dhabi’s decision signals it intends to pump unilaterally, which in theory adds barrels to the market — but only if the buyers exist and the logistics hold. The move also pre-empts any Saudi-led pivot toward Iran, deepening the rift between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi over how to manage Tehran’s eventual reintegration. The cartel that priced oil for half a century is now visibly fragmenting.

Brent Tops $126 Overnight — Pares to $124.20 at London Open

Brent crude touched $126.10 in Asian trading shortly after 03:00 BST, the highest intraday level of the war, before paring to $124.20 by London’s open. WTI peaked at $113.40. The combined trigger was the UAE’s OPEC exit and confirmation that Trump’s national security team has begun planning for an indefinite naval blockade. Hormuz transit volumes remain at roughly 12% of normal; Lloyd’s of London continues to refuse Persian Gulf hull cover at quotable rates.

Dive deeper
The intraday high of $126 is significant because it breaches the previous wartime peak set on 14 March, confirming the trend rather than a spike. Forward curves now price Brent above $120 through to year-end under the central scenario, with $140 within two standard deviations of the mean. UK forecourt prices typically lag the wholesale move by 10 to 14 days, meaning the $126 print this morning will appear at the pumps just as the local elections are concluding on 8 May. The Treasury has not signalled any duty rebate, leaving households fully exposed to the pass-through.

Pakistan Expects Iran’s Revised Peace Proposal by Friday

Pakistani officials told Reuters that Tehran is expected to deliver a revised peace proposal through Islamabad by Friday, the first substantive Iranian counter-offer since Rubio rejected the previous version on Monday. Trump responded to the deadlock by warning Iran’s leadership it had “better get smart soon.” The new Iranian text is reported to address Hormuz transit protocols but stops short of conceding on the nuclear precondition that Washington has made non-negotiable.

Dive deeper
Pakistan’s mediation role has quietly become indispensable. Islamabad has the diplomatic credibility with Tehran that Gulf states no longer possess and the Sunni-state credentials that Riyadh and Abu Dhabi cannot offer. The Friday timeline is significant: it gives the Bank of England’s Thursday decision a 24-hour window in which markets price the absence of progress, then a potential weekend release valve if the proposal advances. The nuclear precondition remains the immovable obstacle. Until Iran addresses it directly, no proposal — however creative on shipping — will satisfy a White House that has framed the entire blockade around it.

Netanyahu Adviser Accuses Hezbollah of Breaching Lebanon Ceasefire

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s foreign policy adviser, speaking to Channel 12 last night, said “Hezbollah is breaching the ceasefire. That’s not surprising, and we’re hitting them back very hard.” The Israeli air force has conducted at least four strikes in southern Lebanon in the past 36 hours, targeting what the IDF described as missile-launch infrastructure. Lebanese Prime Minister Salam called for restraint and said the ceasefire framework remained intact despite the violations.

Dive deeper
The Lebanon track has been the quiet success of the regional diplomacy this year, decoupling Hezbollah from the broader Iran confrontation and giving Israel a manageable northern flank. The current escalation risks unwinding that progress at the moment when Tehran most needs an alternative front to relieve pressure on its Hormuz position. If Hezbollah resumes systematic rocket fire, Israel will respond at scale, drawing IDF resources back to the north and changing the calculus on a possible US-Israel direct strike on Iranian targets. The Salam government’s ability to police Hezbollah is the single point of failure.

Charles Lays Wreath at Arlington — Final Day of US State Visit

King Charles III and Queen Camilla conclude the four-day state visit today with a wreath-laying at Arlington National Cemetery, followed by a programme in Front Royal, Virginia, including a national park tour, a horse-racing farm visit, and a reception with conservation groups and Indigenous leaders. The royals fly home this evening. No trade deliverables have been announced; tariff and Hormuz commitments remain conspicuously absent from the four-day communiqué tally.

Dive deeper
The Arlington wreath-laying is the ceremonial bookend to a visit defined by warmth without substance. Tuesday’s Congress address generated bipartisan applause but produced no specific UK-US framework on the war. The Wednesday New York programme delivered emotional resonance at the 9/11 memorial but no policy. Today’s Virginia day is pitched at Trump’s rural base rather than the Westminster audience. For Downing Street, the question is whether Charles’s personal capital can be converted into political leverage on tariffs or Hormuz over the coming weeks. The early evidence is that the visit was its own reward; nothing further follows automatically.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Bank of England at Noon — Pill Expected to Vote for a Rate Hike

The Monetary Policy Committee delivers its rate decision at noon. All 62 economists polled by Reuters expect a hold at 3.75%, but an 8–1 split is anticipated, with Chief Economist Huw Pill expected to vote for a quarter-point rise to 4%. Governor Bailey holds his press conference at 11:30. The accompanying Monetary Policy Report will be the first detailed forecast set since the war began — markets are watching the inflation and growth projections more closely than the rate itself.

Dive deeper
A dissent from Pill is procedurally significant because it formalises the inflation hawks’ position on the committee and gives the next decision a hawkish drift. If the Report’s central case acknowledges a CPI peak above 5%, sterling rallies and gilt yields rise; if Bailey signals openness to a June hike, the curve reprices two further increases. The press conference matters as much as the statement: Bailey’s tone on second-round wage effects will determine whether markets believe the Bank is ahead of the curve or chasing it. The committee faces the worst macro hand of any in its post-1997 history.

BoE Worst Case: CPI Peaks at 6.2% in Early 2027, Rates to 5.25%

Pre-meeting briefing seen by the Financial Times suggests the Bank’s adverse scenario will project CPI peaking at 6.2% at the start of 2027, with Bank Rate potentially rising as high as 5.25% by year-end if energy prices remain elevated for a “prolonged period.” The central case is more benign — CPI peaking around 4.5% — but the publication of an explicit 6.2% scenario would mark the Bank’s starkest acknowledgement yet of the war’s domestic impact.

Dive deeper
The worst-case 6.2% projection would be the highest UK inflation forecast since the 2022 energy crisis and would imply real-wage compression of a magnitude that the labour market has not absorbed before. A 5.25% Bank Rate would push average two-year fixed mortgage offers above 7%, triggering forced sales among the roughly 1.4 million households due to refinance in the next 12 months. The fiscal implication is also severe: every percentage point on Bank Rate adds approximately £15 billion to annual debt-servicing costs. Rachel Reeves’s entire fiscal framework was constructed on the assumption that rates would fall through 2026; the opposite is now in prospect.

Gilts Open at 5.13% — LDI Stress Levels Approached Again

Ten-year gilt yields opened at 5.13% this morning, three basis points above last night’s close and a fresh post-LDI-crisis high. The move was driven by the overnight oil shock and the UAE OPEC exit. Sterling traded at $1.2872; the FTSE 100 indicated down 1.2% at the open. Pension fund liability managers have begun adding margin to LDI positions for the second time this week. The Treasury Select Committee has scheduled an emergency session for Tuesday on financial stability.

Dive deeper
At 5.13%, gilt yields are now 13 basis points above the level that triggered the 2022 LDI crisis — though pension funds have rebuilt collateral buffers since. The risk is asymmetric: a further 25-basis-point move higher would force unwinds that the Bank of England would feel obliged to intervene against, while there is no obvious mechanism for yields to fall in the near term given the inflation outlook. The Bank’s noon decision is constrained by exactly this dynamic: a dovish surprise sends gilts higher; a hawkish surprise sends them higher; a neutral statement sends them higher. The market has priced in tightening.

Bloomberg 1,850-Seat Projection Dominates the Morning Press

Bloomberg’s analysis projecting Labour will lose approximately 1,850 of the 2,557 council seats it is defending leads almost every front page this morning. The Times splash reads “Bloodbath looms for Starmer”; the Telegraph runs the seat numbers above the masthead. Reform UK is projected to gain 1,550 seats, with the Greens picking up around 500. The Conservatives are also expected to lose roughly 600 seats, leaving Reform as the principal beneficiary of a generational Labour collapse.

Dive deeper
The press cycle this morning is structurally devastating for Labour. Front-page seat projections eight days before polling generate their own momentum — voters who had not previously considered a protest vote now see it as the consensus position. Reform’s ground operation is the under-appreciated variable: in 2024 they lacked the local infrastructure to convert national polling into seats, but the post-election restructuring has built capacity in roughly 800 wards. If Reform achieves even three-quarters of the projected gains, they will hold more council seats than at any point in their history and arrive in Westminster as the largest party of opposition in local government.

Reshuffle Briefings Intensify — Reeves Sacking Pencilled for 11 May

Westminster lobby reporting overnight has hardened around Monday 11 May as the date for a post-election reshuffle in which Rachel Reeves is expected to be removed as Chancellor. The Mail says Starmer is “willing to sacrifice his Chancellor if the locals are a bloodbath”; Guido reports the “scale of backbench anger” will determine the scope. Names being canvassed as successors include Pat McFadden, Darren Jones and Wes Streeting. Downing Street offers only that the PM has “full confidence in his entire Cabinet.”

Dive deeper
The Treasury succession debate is now happening in public, which is itself destabilising for gilt markets in the middle of a fiscal crisis. McFadden has Treasury experience but lacks bond-market profile; Jones is respected but junior; Streeting would mark a political pivot rather than a fiscal one. None of the three would inherit the headroom to execute a coherent stabilisation plan. The deeper problem for Starmer is that sacking Reeves does not solve the underlying fiscal arithmetic — it merely reassigns responsibility for it. That may be enough to placate backbenchers; it is unlikely to satisfy markets.
One To Read

Brent Oil Pares Gains After Climbing to $126 Per Barrel on US-Iran Escalation Fears

CNBC · The most complete account of the overnight oil move — the UAE’s OPEC exit, the Trump blockade decision, the Hormuz transit collapse, and what it all means for Bank of England day. Read this before the noon rate decision.
☼

Morning Briefing

Thursday 30 April 2026 — 08:00 BST

What It Means For You

  • Brent crude surged 12% overnight to briefly top $125 per barrel — a new wartime high — before paring to $124.50 this morning. Only seven vessels crossed the Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours, down from 60 per day before the crisis. Trump’s team is laying the groundwork for an extended blockade of Iranian ports. Analysts warn energy markets may take a year to normalise even after the conflict ends.
  • The Bank of England announces its rate decision at noon today. All 62 economists polled by Reuters expect a hold at 3.75%, but an 8–1 split is likely, with Chief Economist Huw Pill expected to push for a hike. The Bank publishes its first detailed forecasts since the war began. The press conference at 11:30 will be the most closely watched in years. Gilts have already broken above 5% — sitting at 5.12% this morning.
  • Bloomberg projects Labour will lose 1,850 council seats next Thursday. Starmer is reportedly planning to sack Rachel Reeves in a post-election reshuffle pencilled in for Monday 11 May — “willing to sacrifice his Chancellor if the elections are a bloodbath.” King Charles says farewell at the White House today before heading to Virginia for the final day of the state visit.

Iran War — Day 61. The war started 28 February 2026. Brent hits wartime high of $125 overnight, settles at $124.50. Only 7 vessels through Hormuz in 24 hours. Trump extends blockade planning. Bank of England rate decision at noon — hold expected but 8–1 split likely. First war-era forecasts published. Gilts at 5.12%. Bloomberg: Labour to lose 1,850 seats. Starmer reportedly planning Reeves sacking. Charles departs for Virginia. Four days to local elections.

GEO Geopolitical

Brent Hits $125 Overnight — New Wartime High as Trump Extends Blockade

↻ Yesterday close: $118.33 → Overnight peak: $125+ → This morning: $124.50

Brent crude surged more than 12% overnight to briefly top $125 per barrel before paring to $124.50 — a new wartime high and the highest price since 2022. The move was driven by reports that Trump’s national security team is laying the groundwork for an extended blockade of Iranian ports, including a longer-term closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Only seven commercial vessels crossed the strait in the past 24 hours, compared to the pre-crisis average of around 60 per day. WTI also surged, touching $113 before settling around $111.

Dive deeper
The overnight move from $118 to $125 represents the most violent single session in oil markets since the early days of the war. The trigger was not a new military escalation but a policy confirmation: Trump intends to maintain and extend the blockade indefinitely. For physical oil markets, the 7-vessel daily transit figure is the critical data point — it means the strait is functioning at roughly 12% of capacity, which is functionally closed. Analysts at the IEA have warned that energy markets may take as long as a year to return to normal supply and demand balances even after the conflict ends. The Bank of England’s noon decision arrives into this backdrop: $124 oil makes any dovish signal effectively impossible.

Hormuz at 12% Capacity — Seven Ships in 24 Hours, Extended Closure Planned

The Strait of Hormuz is now operating at approximately 12% of its pre-war capacity, with just seven vessels transiting in the past day. The US naval blockade on Iranian ports continues under Trump’s “choking like a stuffed pig” strategy, while Iranian countermeasures — including mines, drone patrols, and warnings to commercial shipping — keep non-military traffic at a near-standstill. Trump’s team has begun planning for a sustained blockade that could extend through the rest of 2026, according to CNN.

Dive deeper
A blockade extending through 2026 would exhaust the IEA’s strategic petroleum reserves by August at current drawdown rates, leaving the global economy exposed to a physical oil shortage with no buffer. The seven-vessel figure also masks the composition of traffic: most of those ships are carrying non-oil cargo or operating under military escort. Tanker traffic — the kind that moves crude — is essentially zero. Every major oil-importing economy is now competing for the same shrinking pool of non-Hormuz supply, which is why prices are rising despite demand beginning to soften. The price is being set by scarcity, not speculation.

Iran’s Oil Storage Nearly Full — Production Cuts May Be Forced

Al Jazeera reports that Iran’s onshore oil storage is approaching capacity, raising the prospect that Tehran may be forced to cut production even without agreeing to do so. Iran cannot export through the blockaded strait or via sanctioned alternative routes, meaning every barrel produced has to be stored domestically. If storage fills, Iran faces the expensive and technically damaging process of shutting down wells — some of which cannot easily be restarted.

Dive deeper
This is the mechanism through which Trump’s blockade strategy is designed to work. By preventing exports, the US is forcing Iran’s oil industry into a slow-motion shutdown that will take years to reverse. Well shutdowns in ageing fields often result in permanent production losses — reservoir pressure drops, water infiltration increases, and the cost of restarting exceeds the original drilling investment. If Iran is forced into mass well shutdowns, the blockade will have achieved structural damage to Iran’s oil capacity regardless of how the war ends. Tehran knows this, which is why the pressure to negotiate is intensifying — but Trump’s nuclear precondition remains the immovable obstacle.

Charles Says Farewell at White House — Final Day Takes Royals to Virginia

King Charles and Queen Camilla conclude the four-day state visit today with a farewell ceremony at the White House, including a wreath-laying in honour of fallen soldiers from both nations. The royals then travel to Front Royal, Virginia, for a block party celebrating America’s 250th anniversary, a national park visit, and a tour of a horse-racing farm. Charles will meet conservation groups and Indigenous leaders before flying back to England this evening.

Dive deeper
The state visit ends as it began — with ceremony rather than substance. The wreath-laying provides a dignified close, and the Virginia programme connects the visit to America’s founding narrative. For the UK government, the question is what the four days actually delivered beyond goodwill. No tariff concessions have been announced. No Hormuz military commitment was made. The Congress address and the 1814 joke generated warm headlines, but warm headlines do not reduce the price of oil or resolve the trade disputes that prompted the visit. Charles did what he could. Whether Starmer can build on it depends on whether he is still prime minister in two weeks.

Global Recession Risk Rising — Economists Warn of Year-Long Recovery

Economists warn that if the Hormuz disruption extends into the second half of 2026, it could trigger a global recession. Energy markets may take as long as a year to recover to normal supply and demand balances even after the conflict ends, according to analyst assessments cited by CNN. The combination of sustained $120+ oil, depleting strategic reserves, and demand destruction in emerging markets is creating conditions not seen since the 1973 oil crisis — but at a larger scale, given the modern economy’s deeper integration with global energy supply chains.

Dive deeper
The 1973 comparison is instructive but incomplete. The Arab oil embargo lasted five months and triggered a global recession that reshaped energy policy for a generation. The Hormuz crisis is now entering its third month with no resolution in sight and a US president actively extending the blockade. The key difference is scale: in 1973, roughly 5 million barrels per day were affected. Today, 13 million barrels are offline. The IEA’s strategic reserves were designed to bridge a 90-day disruption. We are approaching day 61 with no diplomatic path visible. The arithmetic is unforgiving — and the Bank of England’s noon forecasts will have to acknowledge it.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Bank of England Decides at Noon — Hold Expected but War-Era Forecasts Will Set the Tone

The Monetary Policy Committee announces its rate decision at noon, with all 62 economists polled by Reuters expecting a hold at 3.75%. However, an 8–1 split is anticipated, with Chief Economist Huw Pill — who has warned of the risks of a “wait-and-see” approach — expected to vote for a hike. The Bank will publish its first detailed economic forecasts since the Iran war began, and Governor Bailey holds a press conference at 11:30. With Brent at $124 and gilts at 5.12%, the accompanying statement and forecasts matter more than the rate itself.

Dive deeper
The forecast publication is the main event. If the Bank’s inflation projections acknowledge that CPI could reach 4–5% by autumn — which the oil trajectory makes likely — it will validate the market’s pricing of two or three rate hikes and send gilts higher. If Bailey uses the press conference to signal that a June hike is under consideration, sterling may stabilise but mortgage rates will rise. The Bank faces an impossible trilemma: inflation demands tighter policy, the economy demands looser policy, and the gilt market demands credibility. It cannot satisfy all three. What it says today will determine which it prioritises.

Gilts Break Through 5% Floor — 5.12% This Morning

↻ Yesterday close: 5.00% → This morning: 5.12%

Ten-year gilt yields have decisively broken through the 5% level that had acted as a ceiling for the past week, opening at 5.12% this morning. The overnight oil surge to $125 triggered the move, which began in Asian trading and accelerated through the European open. The level shift from “testing 5%” to “trading above 5%” is technically significant: 5% was resistance; it is now support. The FTSE 100 is indicated down 1.1% at the open.

Dive deeper
At 5.12%, the gilt market has entered the zone where pension fund stress becomes acute. The 2022 LDI crisis was triggered at similar yield levels and similar velocity. The difference is that in 2022, the Bank of England intervened within days to buy gilts and stabilise the market. This time, the driver is external (oil prices) rather than domestic (the mini-budget), which means the Bank’s intervention toolkit is less effective — buying gilts does not reduce the price of crude. If yields continue rising after today’s BOE decision, the question of emergency Financial Policy Committee action becomes unavoidable. Rachel Reeves’s entire fiscal framework is now negative at these levels.

Bloomberg: Labour Set to Lose 1,850 Seats — Worst Local Election Result in a Generation

Bloomberg published analysis projecting Labour will lose approximately 1,850 of the 2,557 council seats it is defending next Thursday — between 50% and 74% of its total. Reform UK is projected to gain 1,550 seats, with the Greens picking up around 500. The Conservatives are also expected to lose roughly 600 seats, making Reform the primary beneficiary of the collapse in support for both major parties. Opinium’s latest national poll puts Reform at 28%, Labour at 19%, and Conservatives at 17%.

Dive deeper
Losing 1,850 seats would represent the worst local election performance for a governing party since the height of the poll tax crisis in 1990. The scale of the projected loss goes beyond Mandelson and political scandal — it reflects a structural collapse in Labour’s voter coalition driven by the cost-of-living crisis, the oil shock, and a perception that the government has lost control of events. The Reform surge to 28% is particularly significant in local elections, where the party has historically lacked the ground infrastructure to convert national polling into council seats. If they achieve even half the projected gains, it rewrites the political map of England and makes the next general election a three-party contest.

Starmer Reportedly Planning to Sack Reeves After Elections — Reshuffle Pencilled for 11 May

Multiple outlets report that Starmer is considering removing Rachel Reeves as Chancellor in a post-election reshuffle pencilled in for Monday 11 May — three days after polling day. Sources told the Mail that the PM is “willing to sacrifice his Chancellor if the local elections are a bloodbath.” Guido Fawkes reported that the “scale of backbench anger at the locals result” will determine the scope of the reshuffle. Downing Street has not denied the reports, offering only that the PM has “full confidence in his entire Cabinet.”

Dive deeper
Sacking the Chancellor three days after a local election bloodbath would be an extraordinary act of political self-preservation — offering backbenchers a scalp to absorb the anger that would otherwise be directed at the PM himself. The problem is that Reeves’s removal in the middle of a gilt crisis, with oil at $124 and the Bank of England tightening, would itself cause market instability. A new Chancellor would inherit negative fiscal headroom, rising borrowing costs, and no room to make spending commitments. Starmer’s refusal to confirm Reeves at PMQs yesterday now reads as deliberate preparation rather than a fumble. The Treasury is being set up as the fall guy for an economic crisis that no Chancellor could have prevented.

Four Days to Local Elections — Parliament Rises Today for Bank Holiday Recess

Parliament sits for the final time today before the 8 May local elections, then rises for the bank holiday recess. The four-day countdown runs through the BOE decision this afternoon, a bank holiday weekend with no political cover, and then polling day. Starmer enters the recess with oil at $124, gilts above 5%, a Chancellor whose sacking is being briefed to newspapers, a projected 1,850-seat loss, and Badenoch’s “not in control” framing still dominating coverage. Reform at 28%. Labour at 19%.

Dive deeper
The bank holiday weekend is the most dangerous period for Starmer. Parliament is not sitting, which means there is no PMQs or Commons business to generate alternative coverage. Oil trades 24/7. If Brent pushes toward $130 over the weekend, the Monday and Tuesday newspaper front pages — the last before polling day — will be dominated by fuel prices and economic fear. Labour’s campaign strategists have no tool to counter that. The only thing that could shift the narrative is a dramatic diplomatic breakthrough on Hormuz, and after Trump’s “choking like a stuffed pig” statement and the extended blockade planning, that prospect has never looked more remote.
One To Read

Labour Set to Lose 1,850 Seats in UK Local Elections, Analysis Shows

Bloomberg · The most detailed seat-by-seat projection of next week’s local elections. Maps the scale of Labour’s losses, Reform’s gains, and the councils at risk. Read this before the bank holiday weekend — these are the numbers that will determine whether Starmer survives May.
● Live Updates · Auto-aggregated from 16 sources

Geopolitical

LIVE World affairs, diplomacy & conflict

UK Domestic Politics

LIVE Westminster, policy & governance

The Daily Brief

Live Updates RSS feeds aggregated from BBC, Sky News, Al Jazeera, Reuters, The Telegraph, Financial Times, The Independent & The Economist
Curated briefings published at 08:00 & 18:00 BST

Privacy Policy Terms of Service Cookie Policy Subscription Terms
@thedailybriefuk

© 2026 The Daily Brief

Premium Subscriptions

Coming Soon

Be the first to know when premium launches. Enter your email and we'll notify you.

We respect your privacy. See our Privacy Policy.

This site uses localStorage for functionality (theme, bookmarks, dismissed alerts). No cookies or tracking are used. Analytics are provided by Cloudflare Web Analytics, which is cookieless and privacy-first. Learn more