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112 articles summarized · Last updated: LATEST

Last updated: May 13, 2026, 5:30 AM ET

Geopolitics & Macro Headwinds

Global markets traded mixed as investors digested escalating tensions ahead of the meeting between Presidents Trump and Xi. Geopolitical resilience has now outweighed economic growth as the primary draw for Middle Eastern funds following the Iran conflict, which saw Turkey’s foreign reserves suffer their largest monthly drop on record in March due to selloffs in emerging market assets. Meanwhile, the IEA issued a stark warning that the supply shock from the Strait of Hormuz disruption will take months to resolve, forcing the agency to revise its global oil demand forecast to contract by 420,000 barrels per day this year, a sharp downgrade from the prior 80,000-barrel estimate.

Commodities & Energy Fallout

Oil prices retreated slightly after a multi-day ascent as traders awaited clarity from the U.S.-Iran negotiations and the looming Trump-Xi summit. The ongoing conflict has caused global oil inventories to draw down at a rapid pace, although it has cut into consumption enough to prevent immediate catastrophic shortages. In Japan, the high cost of liquefied natural gas (LNG) due to choked Mideast supplies has forced power generators to increase coal-fired output as a less expensive alternative. The disruption also permeates logistics, with shipping firm Hapag-Lloyd warning of rising costs for fuel and regional network disruptions, while construction projects globally face delays due to soaring material costs derived from oil products.

Corporate Earnings & Restructuring

European corporate sentiment showed some resilience, with German industrial giant Siemens launching a substantial €6 billion ($7 share buyback over five years against a demanding backdrop, while Deutsche Telekom lifted its full-year guidance based on positive outlook increases from its U.S. subsidiary. In contrast, Japanese automaker Nissan projected a return to net profit for the fiscal year, signaling that aggressive restructuring moves are beginning to take hold after seven consecutive quarterly losses. Elsewhere, UK testing house Intertek is leaning toward recommending the final takeover offer from private equity firm EQT AB, valued at £10.6bn (£60 per share), marking a significant transaction in the London M&A scene.

Fixed Income & Central Bank Moves

U.S. Treasury yields eased marginally, pulling back from recent highs set after Tuesday’s inflation print, with the 10-year note hovering near.5%. This movement filtered into fixed income markets across the continent, as Eurozone government bond yields edged lower in tandem. In a move bucking the yield trend, Japan’s 20-year government bond yield surged to its highest level since 1997 as energy price pressures compound domestic inflation concerns, leading Japanese funds to offload the most US debt since 2022. In emerging markets, the Hungarian forint weakened unexpectedly after the central bank cut the interest rate on its foreign-currency swaps, despite the currency having been one of the strongest performers this year.

Asia Tech & Market Shifts

The meeting between Washington and Beijing loomed over market sentiment, with particular focus on technology trade. Chinese AI stocks surged contingent on H200 supply after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang joined President Trump’s delegation to China, fueling speculation about securing critical chip architecture. Meanwhile, Pakistan’s neighbor, India, intensified measures to defend the rupee, with the government more than doubling import tariffs on gold and silver to curb non-essential outflows, though this austerity push has added to pessimism in local stock markets. On the corporate M&A front, Chinese EV maker BYD Co. is exploring taking over underutilized European plants from Stellantis NV and others as it expands its international footprint.

European Economic & Political Stability

Political uncertainty in the UK eased slightly after Prime Minister Keir Starmer reaffirmed his commitment to remain in office, causing the sterling to recover against the euro. However, the broader Eurozone economy shows signs of strain, with French unemployment jumping above 8% for the first time in five years, suggesting the bloc was already fragile before the Mideast conflict began. ECB Governing Council member Olli Rehn warned that current data suggest the region is facing the starting point of a stagflationary shock driven by energy prices. In company news, German insurer Allianz posted a record Q1 profit, boosted by strong property-casualty results and €38 billion in inflows to its asset manager, PIMCO.