Morning Briefing
What It Means For You
- Reform UK has won more than 450 council seats overnight in a historic political shift; Labour has lost more than 300 seats including in long-held heartlands such as Hartlepool and Wigan. Sir Keir Starmer has refused to resign, calling the results “tough — very tough, no sugarcoating”. Labour is also on course to lose its century-long lead in Wales for the first time. The PLP’s leadership-challenge mechanism is now politically active even if not formally triggered today.
- The US-Iran one-page memo to end the 69-day war remains under formal review in Tehran and has not yet been signed. Trump’s pause on the Project Freedom Hormuz operation remains in effect; Iran’s response is being channelled via Pakistani mediators with Saudi support. Brent settled at $101.27 on Wednesday after a 7.83% collapse and has held the $100–103 range since; if the memo lands, expect another leg lower towards $90 and pump-price relief over 7–10 days.
- UK markets are firm despite the political shock: the FTSE 100 trades around 8,412 (+0.5%), sterling holds above $1.30, and ten-year gilt yields remain at 4.92%, the lowest level in three weeks. The Reform-led council reshape and Labour collapse were largely priced in. The genuine market event next week will be Reeves’ first response to a fiscal arithmetic that no longer holds — and any leadership-challenge mechanics that surface from this afternoon onward.
Iran War — Day 69. The war started 28 February 2026. Trump’s pause on Project Freedom remains in effect as Iran finalises its response to the one-page memo via Pakistani mediators; Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is the second named mediator. The text would freeze Iranian uranium enrichment for 12 years (down from 20 in the prior US position), unfreeze billions of dollars in Iranian assets and reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping. Brent settled Wednesday at $101.27 (-7.83%) and has held the $100–103 range; WTI at $95.08. Russia’s Victory Day parade on Red Square today proceeded without tanks for the first time in nearly two decades; Belarusian and North Korean leaders attended.
UK UK Domestic Politics
Reform Wins 450+ Council Seats; Labour Loses 300+ Including Hartlepool, Wigan
Reform UK has won more than 450 council seats overnight in what Nigel Farage called a “truly historic shift in British politics”. Labour has lost more than 300 seats, including all 20 it was defending in Wigan — a former mining town the party has held for over 50 years — and a decisive defeat in Hartlepool. The Conservatives lost more than 200 seats; the Greens gained 40-plus and the Liberal Democrats made smaller gains. Counting in the West Midlands and Wales is still in progress.
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Starmer Refuses to Resign: “Results Are Tough, No Sugarcoating”
Sir Keir Starmer made a pre-noon statement outside Downing Street acknowledging “tough — very tough” results and explicitly refusing to step down. He called the verdict “a clear message about the cost of living and the pace of change”. Cabinet ministers including Wes Streeting, Yvette Cooper and Bridget Phillipson were filmed entering Downing Street separately within an hour of the statement. No formal leadership challenge has been triggered; the PLP’s 20% nomination threshold (around 80 MPs) remains the gating mechanism.
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Labour on Course to Lose Wales for First Time in Over a Century
Labour is on course to fail to win the most seats in a Wales-wide election for the first time in more than 100 years, with Plaid Cymru on track to top the Senedd poll. Reform UK has won every council it stood candidates in across north Wales. The result completes a structural realignment of Welsh politics that began with the 2024 general election and has accelerated through the cost-of-living period. Counting in several Welsh authorities continues into Friday afternoon.
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Pound Firms, FTSE Up 0.5% as Result Lands as Priced
UK markets opened firmer despite the historic council results, with the FTSE 100 up 0.46% to around 8,412 and sterling trading at $1.3041, near a one-month high. Ten-year gilt yields hold at 4.92%, the lowest in three weeks. Markets had largely priced the Reform breakthrough through the back half of April; the late-cycle Iran de-escalation premium is the dominant macro driver this morning. UK miners and financials led; consumer staples lagged.
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Conservatives Quiet After 200-Seat Loss; Badenoch Faces Internal Pressure
The Conservative Party has lost more than 200 council seats overnight, eclipsing its 2026 worst-case planning. Kemi Badenoch made a brief televised statement at 09:30 BST acknowledging the result without setting out a strategic response. Sources told Bloomberg the 1922 Committee’s informal soundings on Badenoch’s leadership have begun within hours. Reform has not just taken Labour territory: 200-plus Conservative losses in shire England suggest Badenoch’s base coalition is also fracturing.
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GEO Geopolitical
Iran Memo Still Under Tehran Review; No Final Signing Yet
The one-page memo to end the 69-day war remains under formal review in Tehran and has not yet been signed, according to CNN and NPR reporting overnight. Iran’s foreign-ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei reiterated that Tehran is finalising its position and will channel its formal response via Islamabad. The 30-day post-signing negotiation window covers nuclear, sanctions and Hormuz access. Trump told reporters the war would be “over quickly”; the IAEA verification mechanism remains the chief sticking point.
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Russia Victory Day Parade Proceeds Without Tanks for First Time in Decades
Moscow’s 81st Victory Day parade on Red Square proceeded without tanks, ICBMs or most heavy hardware, the smallest hardware turnout in nearly two decades. Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko and North Korean delegations attended; most Western and African heads of state withdrew or downgraded. President Putin used the speech to claim that Russia “does not need parades to demonstrate its strength”. Air-defence units were on visible heightened alert; airspace over central Moscow was closed.
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Brent Holds $100–103 Range as Diplomacy Premium Persists
Brent crude trades at $101.20 in early afternoon European hours, broadly in the $100–103 range it has occupied since Wednesday’s 7.83% collapse to $101.27. WTI is at $95.08. The VIX has settled at 27.2, four points below Tuesday’s peak. Implied options markets put the probability of a memo signing within ten days at around 60% — broadly unchanged on the day. Gold pulled back to $4,798 from its mid-week record high; Bitcoin firmed above $80,000.
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Lebanon Death Toll Continues to Rise; Israeli Displacement Orders Expand
Lebanon’s Ministry of Health confirmed overnight that the cumulative death toll from Israeli operations since 2 March now exceeds 2,750. The IDF has issued fresh displacement orders covering villages east of its current zone of occupation in southern Lebanon. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun reiterated that no peace track can begin until Israel implements the existing ceasefire in full. Hezbollah claimed three rocket strikes on Israeli forward positions overnight without retaliation.
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Saudi-Pakistani Mediation Channel Now Public; Riyadh Hosts Backchannel
Saudi Arabia is now the second publicly named mediator on the Iran memo alongside Pakistan, ending weeks of speculation about Riyadh’s role. Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif confirmed Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s direct push for the Hormuz pause. Iranian negotiators are reportedly in Riyadh for working-level talks; a signing ceremony, if the memo lands, would be Saudi-hosted. The diplomatic axis mirrors the architecture of the 2023 Saudi-Iran reconciliation.
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Morning Briefing
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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%.
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Evening Briefing
What It Means For You
- Polls close at 22:00 BST. Photo ID is mandatory at the desk and any postal ballot still in your possession must be hand-delivered to a polling station, not posted, before 22:00 or the vote will not count. Turnout is tracking at 24% as of 17:00 according to council returning officers, suggesting a final figure of 28–32%; that is at the lower end of recent local-election ranges and the most adverse weather environment in twenty years.
- Iran has returned a formal counter-text to the US memo via Islamabad, accepting the framework but proposing a 10-year uranium-enrichment moratorium rather than 12 and seeking clarifications on Hormuz freedom-of-navigation language. The signing window narrows from ‘within days’ to ‘this week’; expect Brent to remain rangebound around $103 until the response is published, with downside if signed and a sharp upside retracement if rejected.
- The FTSE 100 closed marginally lower at 8,363, sterling slipped to $1.2998 and ten-year gilts edged back to 4.93%. Pension scheme members in LDI strategies should see a near-flat day; the live Friday-morning event is the seat count, not tonight’s close. A Reform sweep in Sunderland and the West Midlands could move gilts 10–15bps before London opens.
Iran War — Day 68. The war started 28 February 2026. Tehran returned its formal response on the one-page memo via Pakistan’s foreign ministry shortly after 16:00 BST, accepting the framework but pressing for a 10-year rather than 12-year uranium-enrichment moratorium and requesting clarifications on Strait of Hormuz freedom-of-navigation language. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif issued a joint statement describing the signing window as “this week”. The Israeli cabinet was briefed on the memo terms during a 14:00 BST session in Jerusalem. Brent settled at $103.20; FTSE closed at 8,363.
GEO Geopolitical
Iran Returns Counter-Text on US Memo via Pakistan
Tehran delivered its formal response on the one-page memo to Islamabad shortly after 16:00 BST, accepting the framework but proposing a 10-year uranium-enrichment moratorium rather than the 12 sought by Washington. Iran also requested clarifications on Strait of Hormuz freedom-of-navigation language and on the sequencing of asset releases. The text was relayed to the White House through Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif. Foreign-ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said Tehran was “committed to the path” but required “mutual respect on terms”.
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Saudi-Pakistan Joint Statement Calls Signing Window “This Week”
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif issued an unprecedented joint communique on Thursday afternoon describing the memo as “substantively agreed in principle” and calling the signing window “this week”. The statement, released through the Saudi Press Agency and Radio Pakistan simultaneously, marks the first public co-signature by Riyadh and Islamabad on a Gulf security text in modern times. Both governments urged Washington and Tehran to “preserve the political space” that has opened.
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Israeli Cabinet Briefed on Memo Terms in Jerusalem Session
Prime Minister Netanyahu’s security cabinet convened in Jerusalem at 14:00 BST for a formal briefing on the memo’s terms, with senior officials describing the session as “sober rather than supportive”. The Israeli position remains that any text leaving Iranian enrichment infrastructure intact is unacceptable. Officials stopped short of opposing the memo publicly. Defence minister and IDF chief of staff are reported to have flagged operational concerns about the lifting of the Hormuz mission while Iranian capability remains in place.
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Russia Tightens Red Square Security; Foreign Delegation List Trimmed
The Kremlin imposed a 12-mile drone-exclusion perimeter around central Moscow on Thursday morning ahead of Friday’s Victory Day parade, alongside additional electronic-warfare deployments. The foreign delegation list was trimmed further: Hungary’s Viktor Orban and Serbia’s Aleksandar Vucic withdrew citing “scheduling”. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko and North Korea’s Kim Jong-un remain confirmed. The parade will be the smallest in two decades, with no tanks and limited heavy hardware.
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Brent Settles at $103.20; Oil Options Price 55% Memo Probability
Brent crude settled at $103.20 a barrel on Thursday, holding the post-collapse range as Iran’s counter-text was digested in late London trading. WTI closed at $98.45. Implied options markets reduced the memo-signing probability within ten days from 60% to 55% on the news of Iranian counter-asks. Volatility in front-month Brent options ticked higher; the curve’s contango steepened modestly. Gold edged up to $4,825 as a hedge against breakdown.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Polling Turnout Tracking at 24% by 17:00; Final 28–32% Expected
Polling-station returns collated by the Press Association at 17:00 BST showed in-person turnout running at 24% across England, suggesting a final figure of 28–32% once the 18:00–22:00 evening surge is included. Wales and Scotland were tracking marginally higher at 26%. Wet weather across the Midlands and South-East has compressed turnout; rural Lincolnshire and rural Norfolk are reporting figures more consistent with 35%. Polling stations close at 22:00 BST.
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Postal Ballot Returns Hit 71%, Historically a Pro-Labour Marker
Postal ballot returns reached 71% of issued ballots by Thursday afternoon, towards the upper end of recent local-election norms and historically associated with a stronger Labour vote share than in-person turnout. Roughly 7.4 million postal votes were issued for these elections, a record for a local-election cycle. Returning officers in Sunderland and Wakefield reported postal returns above 75%. Labour campaign sources framed the figure as “the saving variable” in the party’s overnight calculations.
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Farage and Badenoch Close Campaigns in Midlands Marginals
Reform leader Nigel Farage held his final retail event at a working men’s club in Cannock Chase at 12:00 BST; Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch closed in Walsall. Sir Keir Starmer made no further appearances after voting in north London. Sir Ed Davey closed in Eastleigh. The choice of Cannock and Walsall by the Reform and Conservative leaders signals organisational confidence in West Midlands ground operations rather than a defensive closing posture.
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FTSE Closes Down 0.1% at 8,363 as Iran Caveats Compound Election Risk
The FTSE 100 closed marginally lower at 8,363 on Thursday as Iran’s counter-text reduced the implied probability of an immediate memo signing. Sterling eased to $1.2998 and ten-year gilts ticked back to 4.93%. UK miners and oil majors gave back part of Wednesday’s gains. Volumes thinned through the afternoon as London desks squared positions before the result. The genuine market event remains Friday morning’s open, when overnight seat counts will reprice the political backdrop.
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Whips Brief 2024 Intake on Friday-Morning Leadership Procedures
Labour whips circulated a procedural briefing to 2024-intake MPs on Thursday afternoon setting out the mechanics of a leadership challenge from Friday morning, including the 20% nomination threshold and the timeline for a confidence vote. The briefing was framed as “contingency” but the timing leaves little doubt about expectations. Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner remain the principal succession candidates. PLP sources told Bloomberg that 90–100 MPs would back a challenge motion if Sunderland falls.
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Evening Briefing
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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”.
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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%.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Morning Briefing
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.
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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”.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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%.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Weekly Roundup
The stories that defined this week View roundup
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
GeopoliticalTehran 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
GeopoliticalKing 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
GeopoliticalKyiv 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
DomesticThe 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
GeopoliticalThe 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
GeopoliticalIsraeli 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
GeopoliticalPresident 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
DomesticBloomberg, 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
DomesticPolling 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
GeopoliticalThe 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
MarketsMarkets 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
DomesticThe 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.
Morning Briefing
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Evening Briefing
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Morning Briefing
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Morning Briefing
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
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Gilts Below 5% Heading into the Weekend — 4.96% on Friday Close
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Morning Briefing
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.
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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.
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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.
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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%.
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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.
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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.
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Gilts Below 5% for First Time in a Week — 4.98% This Morning
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Evening Briefing
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
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
FTSE Closes +1.3% at 8,285 — Gilts Hold Just Below Five Per Cent
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Evening Briefing
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
BOE Holds at 3.75% (8–1) — Pill Dissents, Warns Rates Must Rise “More Promptly”
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.
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Gilts Rally to 5.00% — FTSE Jumps 1.3% as BOE Hold Calms Markets
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Morning Briefing
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.”
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.”
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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.
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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.”