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135 articles summarized · Last updated: LATEST

Last updated: May 25, 2026, 5:30 PM ET

Energy & Commodities

Oil futures dropped below $100 for the first time in three weeks as optimism grew over a potential U.S.-Iran deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, with Brent crude sliding 7% on the day. The prospect of renewed Iranian barrels and eased shipping disruptions sent European gas prices tumbling 5%, while gold edged higher on a weaker dollar and inflation-relief hopes. A separate report noted two LNG tankers had already transited the Strait, signaling tentative progress in clearing the three-month backlog. The price retreat, however, is weighing on U.S. farm loan repayment rates as agricultural incomes feel the pinch from lower crop prices, even as loan demand rises.

Global Rates & Currencies

The dollar extended its slide on Iran deal optimism, pressuring the greenback across the board. U.S. Treasury yields dropped sharply as investors priced in a higher likelihood of a September Fed rate cut, a view supported by BlackRock which sees "sufficient factors" for easing. In Europe, the euro zone's Villeroy said spiking energy costs have not yet triggered second-round inflationary effects, while Stournaras urged the ECB to avoid overly restrictive policy. The Indian rupee strengthened to a multi-week high on oil-relief and central bank comments that the currency is undervalued, while the Sri Lankan rupee is set to recover by year-end as oil prices ease.

Markets & Geopolitics

The Merrill Lynch survey showed Midwestern lenders reporting deteriorating farm loan repayment rates, a direct hit from the war-driven agricultural downturn. In Europe, Italian stocks hit a 26-year high led by energy and chip stocks, while European shares advanced broadly on Iran deal hopes. The AI momentum rally hit a record, powering ahead despite growth concerns from the conflict. In emerging markets, stocks and currencies rose as oil slid, with Ghana’s central bank planning to increase gold purchases to 30% of output from June, a move to bolster reserves.

Tech & Corporate Moves

Meta’s CTO Andrew Bosworth is spearheading an AI-driven workforce transformation, while venture capitalist John Doerr called AI the biggest tech "tsunami" ever, suggesting it remains underhyped. A controversial report revealed AI guardrails on Meta and Google models can be stripped in minutes, creating risks for malware and biological weapons responses. In Japan, retail trading volume almost doubled as AI fever and off-exchange booms gripped individual investors. SoftBank tapped the retail bond market again, raising ¥260 billion ($1.6 in a subordinated bond sale aimed at individuals.

Asia & Pacific Markets

Chinese authorities cracked down on cross-border stock trading, triggering a $32 billion rush for the exit from Hong Kong assets and wiping out a tycoon’s $1.7 billion fortune. In Australia, the government is set to include existing LNG contracts in its resource security reservation policy, intensifying pressure on producers. Japan’s bond yield surge is widening the performance gap between regional banks with weak investment portfolios and stronger peers. China’s solar installations fell for a fourth straight month, underscoring persistent domestic demand weakness.

Secondary Impacts & Other Stories

The U.S. and Iran are inching toward a deal, but the toughest issues—nuclear stockpiles, enrichment, and missiles—remain unresolved. Mexico will host Iran’s World Cup team after the U.S. denied them entry visas amid military tensions. In Africa, South Africa’s Pick n Pay slumped after delaying a turnaround target, while Nigeria’s Q1 GDP growth eased on a slowdown in both oil and non-oil sectors. The Czech premier urged an interest rate cut despite inflation risks. The UAE quietly slipped more tankers through the Strait, using its own fleet to bypass the blockade.