A newsletter designed to prepare you for the day, offering a concise summary of overnight developments and key events ahead that could influence your workday.
By Richard Fargose
May 9, 2025 at 1:31 AM IST
QUICK SNAPSHOT
Global Sentiment: Risk-on
Factors: Trade talk Optimism; India-Pak geopolitical tension
TODAY’S WATCHLIST
- China trade data
- BoE Governor Bailey speaks
THE BIG STORY
President Trump and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced a modest bilateral trade agreement Thursday that maintains the US's 10% baseline tariffs on British goods while offering targeted concession including reduced auto duties and expanded agricultural access. The deal, hailed by both leaders as a "breakthrough," marks the first in what Trump promises will be a wave of renegotiations following his sweeping tariff measures. However, the President emphasized that this agreement should not set expectations for other talks, warning that partners with large trade surpluses—like China—may face tougher terms. The announcement came as US. negotiators prepared for high stakes talks with China in Switzerland, underscoring the administration's piecemeal approach to reshaping global trade.
The UK secured lower US auto tariffs and maintained exemptions from Trump’s 25% auto import tax but failed to remove the 10% baseline duty or address Washington’s objections to Britain’s digital services tax. With the July 9 deadline looming for paused 50% tariffs on 57 other trading partners, the agreement offers a glimpse into Trump’s strategy: claiming political wins with incremental deals while maintaining his broader protectionist framework.
DATA
US initial jobless claims fell by 13,000 to 228,000 last week, below forecasts of 230,000, as New York’s spring break-related surge reversed with a 15,089 decline in unadjusted filings. While the labour market shows resilience, tariff risks loom over sectors like transport and hospitality that drove recent volatility. The data suggests underlying stability, though seasonal distortions and trade pressures cloud the trend.
WHAT HAPPENED OVERNIGHT
US stocks climbed on Thursday as markets welcomed a new US-UK trade deal slashing British tariffs to 1.8% from 5.1% while maintaining US import levies, with Trump hinting at substantive upcoming China talks. Airlines led gains, soaring 5.4% as Rolls-Royce parts won tariff exemptions—Delta surged 7.2%—while Boeing jumped 3.3% on a $10bn UK aircraft order. The accord signals potential momentum for tariff resolutions ahead of critical negotiations.
US Treasury yields surged to multi-week highs, with the 10-year note jumping 11.3bps to 4.388% and the 30-year bond up 8.1bps to 4.853%, as the US-UK trade deal fuelled bets on further tariff resolutions reducing Fed rate-cut urgency. BNY Mellon's John Velis noted fading trade risks could limit Powell's need for aggressive easing, reshaping policy expectations.
The US dollar strengthened broadly on Thursday, supported by safe-haven demand and firm Treasury yields. The dollar index rose 0.77% to 100.66, while the euro fell 0.67% to $1.1223. The greenback gained 1.46% against the yen to 145.92 and climbed 1.01% versus the Swiss franc to 0.832, while sterling slipped 0.42% to $1.3239.
Brent crude oil prices rebounded on Thursday, lifted by optimism around potential progress in US-China trade negotiations. US crude rose 3.17% to settle at $59.91 a barrel, while Brent climbed 2.81% to $62.84, recovering all of Wednesday’s losses. Hopes of easing trade tensions between the world’s top oil consumers supported market sentiment.
Day’s Ledger
Economic Data:
Corporate Actions
Policy Events
TICKERS
MUST READ